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7~ n·nh

Sunda_\

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·
WINS BIKE . Johnnie Kuhn, Gallipolis, left, was the winner
: or a 10-speed mountain bike given away during a Christmas pro. motion at McClure's Family Restaurant in Middleport. Presenting
·. the bike to Kuhn is store manager.' Bo~ McClure.

Cincinnati Zoo joins animal
rescue effort in Grenada

CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Cincinnati Zoo is helping save
more than 200 exotic animals confiscaiCd on the island of Grenada.
The government on Grenada
took the animals from a smuggler
who was selling them illegally. The
cation Diploma rank higher on lit· zoo has been brought into the proeracy than many high school grad· ject because. of its expertise with
uatcs.
endangered species.
If the bottom li ne with business
More than 100 of the animals
and industry is profit then business are ex11ected to arrive at the zoo
and industry must provide their after being quarantined at a wildlife
own answer to their literacy prob- · station in the Florida Keys.
lcm. The solution may not be diffiThe Convention on International
cult. Intra-company workplace lit- Trade in Endangered Species,
eracy programs can be developed based in Switzerland, contacted the
that would pay for themselves in World Bird Sanctuary in Eureka,
terms of less lost work becau~ of Mo ., to help care for the animals.
accidents, less oveni me, increased The sanctuary asked the zoo to parproductivity and increased profit.
ticipate.
Cisco urged the local Rotary
" They were our first choice,"
Club to get in volved in li teracy said Walter Crawford Jr. , sanctuary
program s in the area. With lo w executive director. "They didn't
educational levels many industries hesitate. This might be the first
wil.l avoid coming to the county, time this (resc4e mission) has ever
Cisco feels.
,been done.''
A guest at the club meeting was
David Oehler, supervi sor of
Ma rk Circle of Wichita, Kan ., birds at the zoo, will fly to Grenada
grandso n of Rotarian Charles on Saturday . Most of the animals
Blakeslee.
·
coming to the zoo are birds.
Richard Vaughan Jr. , presided
''The people taking care of them
and Cisco was introduced by John
now down there have neither the
Rice, program c h~ irman .
skills nor the funds to care for them
properly," he said. " We also told
'

·cisco Rotary Club speaker
Ponney G. Cisco. Rotary DisU"ict Literacy Chairman from Jackson, wa s guest speaker at Mon{!ay's meeting of the MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club held at the
.Heath United Methodist Church.
Cisco is also superintendent and
adult director of the Gallia-lack·son-Vinton Joint Vocation School
District.
. Cisco pointed out 25 to 40 per·cent of the adult population of the
United SUites is functionally illiterate, decreasi ng production and
:pro fit in business and industry .
-Many lost time accidents are
.caused in induslry simply because
'the work force members arc un able
·to read safety manuals.
: Acco rding to Cisco, Ohio is
re garded as ranking 50th in the
-United States in regard to literacy.
l n Meigs County 6,250 arc listed as
110t having a high school diploma;
:1,520 arc listed as not graduating
Jrom the eighth grade, stated Cisco.
·In many places people who have
:Passed the ICSl for the Gcncrnl Edu'

DO-N

the government of Grenada we
would have them out by Jan. 1. It is
a big cooperative effort. We could
not have done this on our own. ''
The operation was organized in
a few weeks, Oehler said. Federal
Express will make an unschedul~
stop in Grenada to pick up the animals and fly them to Miami.
"Federal Express is the key to
this whole operation," Oehler said.
"There's no way we could move
this amount of cargo the way we
need to. Without Federal Express
doing what they're doing, we
wouldn't be able to do it.' '
The U.S . Department of Agriculture quickly provided permits
for the animals.
" It' s all las t-minute , 1 lth hour," Oehler said. "The point
was to get them here as fast as possible and as healthy as possible."
Crawford said the government
of Grenada had several option s,
including killing the animals.
" They chose our option," he
said.
Among the animals are monkeys, tortoises, macaws, toucans,
parrots, cranes and pheasants.
"The message that has to get
out is that a lot of people are raping
the rain forests and other places for
animals. That just has to stop."

of dam~. 11wlk you for teUing
your story.
Dear Ana Landers: I work with
an 11th grade chUR:h conftnnalion
class. As a service project, the
students served dinner at a local
shelter for the homeless. One of
our 'dinner guests" drafted the
foUowing letter which he, gave 10
'th
d
1
me to 8hare wt rny stu ents. t
left quite an impression on many
of them, and I thought you might
want to share it ·with your readers.
Here it is:
Dear Friends: Thank you for the
fme meal. Most of us are here today
for three main reasons:
I. Lack of education.
2. Drug and alcOhol addiction -which includes beer and prescription drugs used to excess.
3. Alienation from family and
friends.
So you won't be here some day in
thefuwreonthertceivingendofall
this good food and hospitality,

pi~~S~y in school.

Meigs
County
•
year In
•
rev1ew

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· MARTINS FERRY, Ohio (AP) •
- A man who had to quit his job ~
because of a back injury didn 'I ;
think it was going to be a very '
bright Christmas until former co- :
workers stepped in.
. :
Dale Mussard worked for Ntck· ,
les Bakery for II years before his :
injury forced his family to live on ;
welfare payments.
Some friends from the store l
stopped by for a visit during the :
hohdays and gave him a swprise.
. "We were sitting around talking_ i
when one of the guys asked us to l
come outside and see the little ,
. motorized car he had bought for his ,
son," said Mussard's wife, Rhon- :
da. "We went out to his van and :
got the shock of our Jives.''
·
The vehicle was filled with toys, :
presents and groceries. ·
:
"1 thought he had just been out ·
shopping and was about to ask
where the little car was when they :
said, 'Merry Christmas' and hand- ·
ed my husband an envelope wit~ :
$450 in it,'' she said. "My husband ·
j.ust stood in the driveway and .
cried."
;
"I just couldn't believe it," said ·
Mussard. "It was a pretty tough :
year for us and we had just about :
given up hope, and then these good ·
people turn everything around for :
us and give us a lot of help.
" Things are hard for everyone :
around here and it really is some- :
thing that these people would take
time out to help us,." he said.
Mrs. Mussard said the family
has been forced to get by for the
past year on a $483 welfare check
and food stamps.
"We have been struggling a lot
in the past year," she said. "We
have been turned down for com pensation and for Social Security
benefits. We thought this was the
end. We were tired of fighting and
th c.n ~o mething like this happens.
Thts tSJUSt wonderful. We can get
- caught up on all our bills and
breathe a little easier now. "
" It's hard for a family to go
from making about $25,000,a year
to nothing. We slruggle just to keep
ahead and keep them from turning
off the utilities," Mussard said.

Chiefs top Raiders 10-6 in 'playoffs · -·C 1
Along the river ..............BI-8
Business!Farm ...............Dl-8
Classified .......................DJ..7
Deatbs.••.•:...... ~...................A3
Editora_I .............................A2
· Sports................. ;...........Cl·6
Weather...........................A-3

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Gallipolis Sunoco Station robbed after
Christmas in 1955 ·James Sands-A 5

Vol. 26, No. 47

Copyrighted 1991

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CONNECTOR

----SEGMENT A

Rock Springs to Five Poi nl s (M EG-7-8.93)

C)

t''

- - - SEGMENT B·C SR·7 to SR- 124
.;--••• SEGMENT

D

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to Ravenswood Bridge

SR-124

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MEIGS COUNTY -·

ROUTE OUTLINE • This map, distributed at a Friday news
conrerence in Pomeroy, outlines the proposed route or the
Ravenswood Bridge Connector. Section "A" has now been'funded,

•

ssl
and construction on that portion or the road, from Rock Springs to
Five Points, is expected to begin in 1994.
·

Cook's decorations help needy Gallia veterans

1he Heartbeat
of Amerita"

$6999
1991 CHEV.
CAPRICE
AHorclable Luxury

Move Up To Cadillat Style"

11

''The Power of Intelligent

11

1991 CHEV.
CAVALIER R/5

CADILLAC

1991 CHEV.

1991 GEO
PRIZM
Auto.· Air
$7999

1991 GEO
METRO
Auto.· Air
$6995

LUMINA
5

10,999

991 CADILLAC 1991 CADILLAC 991 CADILLAC
·SEVILLE
DEVILLE
BROUGHAM
As low As
Rear w•eel Drive
As Low As
$18,995 $20,995 $18,995

1991 OLDS
1991 OLDS
CUTLASS CALAIS
Cl
4Dr., Auto., Air.
As Low As
59688 .
$7990

-.t.'il 1991. OLDS
CUTLASS CALAIS
$10,490

CUTLASS
s'UPREME
$14,999

1990 CADILLAC 992 CADILLAC 1991
SEVILLE
SEDAN DEVILLE
ALLANTE CONY.
Was $32,080
Now
NEfl
ALL NEW FOR

•MUST SEE•

$33,995
11894
$11,999
11876
'25 49
'92
IIW
1991 OLDS
1991 OLDS
1992 OLDS ·
991 GEO
CADILLAC 1992 CADILLAC 1992 CADILLAC
1991 CHEV.
1992 CHEV. FULL
REGENCY
98
BRAYADA
STORM
DEVILLE SEDAN DEVILLE
SILVERADO
DELTA 88 ROYALE
SEDAN DEVILLE
SIZE PICKUP
Wa$26,224
All Wlleel Drive
PICKUP. LOADED HATCHBACK
· Was $33,948
Was $32,211
NOW
ONLY
Was
$25.314
•Llel Rock•
2.9%
APR
Was$33,266
Was $11,468
.
.
Auto., Air: Mudl
NOW
Now 125,999
FINANCING
*21,449 *21,499 .
$9 999 Now'13,999
s30,699 lo~;29,989
$9 999
~

'''

.

ALL CARS MUST GO - THIS IS ;A"'CLEARANCE ·sALE
'

1990 PONTIAC
LEMANS

Alto., » COld.

'4995 or 15995 or
1
119rer•. '144 ,., •.
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1991 CHEVY
BWER4x4

1991 GEO
MmOCONV.

Alto.. »

1986FORD
TEMPO 5 SPD

.5 Spcl., Air.

Air

'6995 or
'165 Ptr •·

'2995 or
'79.95 Ptr •·

'16,495

1988 CHRYSLER 1986 CHEV. S·IO
5 Sp., AM·FM
Sth AVENUE
$6495

*3995 or
1109 PerMo.
"I

1988 OLDS
CIERA

1987 BUICK
CENTURY

'4495 or '4995 or
1135 Per MO.
1109 Per
•

Cook, who seemed apprehensive about the pubticity, emphasized he wasn't doing this for the
recognition. He said he started the
decorating projec t about eig ht·
years-ago and one thing just led to
another.
"It's more to me th an just
lights," Cook explained.
Cook, with assistance from his
13-year-old niece Vanessa Cook,
made most of the decoratioos with
the exception of the mann equin
heads- which they painted.

Dowler said. "We have initiated
several large projects in this area of
the state and expect more of the
same over the nCJt[ few years."
Local officials were also pleased
with the announcement, County
engineer .Philip M. Roberts feels
especially close 10 the projecuincc;
he was once directly involved.
"I was the project engineer on
the existing four-lane, the P.an of
U.S. 33 that the new road wtU connect to," Roberts said on Friday.
"I've Jon$ waited for this day. I
think it will be a great step, and I
am proud that this admirtistration is
going ahead with this project as
they promised to do during the
campaign."
Meigs County Commissioner
Richard E. Jones also praised
OlXlT and the governor for their
commitment to the project.
"We've talked about progress
on this road for 20 years, and
we've had a lot of promises from
different administrations. But we
haven't turned the first shovel of
dirt,"
"I want to thank
on A·3

Other groups and individuals
have also helped veterans this holiday season, Lee noted. The American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars gave out food and fruit
baskets. The baskets, contain ing
eve rything needed to make a com- .
plete Chriwnas meat, were given
to the neediest Veterans Service
clients.
It was hard deciding who to give
the baskets to, Lee commented.
The baskets went to veterans or
their widows who demostrated the
absolute most need.

aide to state House Speaker Vern
Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, and state
Budget Director Greg Browning
met privately for almost two hours.
Riffe had the flu and co uldn't
attend .
Voinovich and the others conducted a news conference later to
discuss what can be done about the
deficit projected for the current liscal year, which ends June 30.
He said about $200 million in
additional revenue would come
from what he called a smorgasbord
of ideas. These could include
increases in certain taxes, use of

some or all of the state's $100 million rainy-day fund or a combination of such solutions.

No paper
Wednesday
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily Sentinel
will not be published on
Wednesday, New Year's Day,
so that employees may observe
the holiday with tbeir ramiUes.

or

FUNDING MADE • Ohio Department
Transportation
Deputy Director John Dowler, standing, announced in Pomeroy on
Friday that the nrst portion o1 the Ravenswood Bridge Connedor
has been runded in the amoont o1 $11 m!Uion. The 2.25 mile seclion will consist or new segment of U.S. Route 33 from Rock
Springs to Five Points. Also pictured is ODOT Planning Engineer
Anthony Durm.
,
,
,
,

·Gallia-Meigs Patrol Post probes six wrecks Gall!polls, county gnndlng
JIMFR~EMAN

Check Out These Buys On Quality Pre·Owned Vehicles
1990 GEO
MmOSSPD

tals.

By BRIAN J, REED
Times-Sentinel Starr
POMEROY • It is being lauded
as a "campaign promise fulfilled".
After years of planning and
·speculation, the first portion of the
Pomeroy/Ravenswood Connector
has been funded, and plans for the
remainder of the road coostruction
are expected to be finalized in mid1992.
At a news conference on Friday
morning, Ohio Department of
Transportation Deputy Director
John Dowler announced that the
first segment of the 18.6 inile road
will construct 2.25 miles of U.S.
Route 33 from Rock Springs to
Five Points. The estimaiCd cost of
the fli'St segment is Sll million.
Highway plans will be complet·
ed and construction wiU be ready to
begin by late 1994, according to
Dowler. ,
"Approval of this project
demonstrates !he strong commitment that Governor Voinovich and
ODOT Director Jerry Wray have
made to developing the highwa~
system for Southeastern Ohio,

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Voinovich to announce series of
cuts in state spending Monday

Engineering 11

1991 CHEV.
CORSICA
Auto, Air
$7999

office decided to buy gloves and
By JIM FREEMAN
socks
for those veterans who are
Times-Sentinel Starr
the
most
needy . Lee silid she came
GALLIPOLIS - Some needy
Gallia County veterans will receive up with the idea after watching
a sort of belated Christmas present people comin~ into the office, ch ~f­
thanks to a Gallipolis man' s gen- ing and blowmg on llleir hands to
warm them up.
erosity ... and ingenuity.
She said she has enough money
Dur.ing the Chri stmas season,
many Gallia County residents for SO· to· 75 pairs of gloves and
become familiar with a house on socks.
· Bob McCormick Road. This panicLee com mented that the goods
ular house is known for its extrava- will be given out on a most-needed
gan t Christmas decorati ons. basis and that the leftover money
Motorists come from miles around . would. be used to buy magazines
io see the decoratioos - including for Veterans Administration hospia life-size nativity scene complete
· with motorized, moving charac t.ers
and, if it's not too cold, a bubble
machine.
·
Of course, people are free to
simply drive by and soak up the
·sights of Cook's Christmas splcn·
dor, but many people stop, get out
By ROBERT E. MILLER
and observe. Many of the more
Associated Press Writer
observant have n_oticed a pan of the
COLUMBUS - Gov. George
display includes a donation box for . Voinovich said he will announce
gifts of food and money.
Monday a series of cuts in sta te
The man who owns and deco- spending that should resolve about
half of Ohio's projected $440 mil. raiCs the house is Danny Cook.
, According to Rhonda Lee at the lion budget deficit.
·Oallia County Veteran s Servi ce
But he added Friday,after a budoffice , Cook brought the money , get summ it meeting that the other
· ·donated by generous viewers of his half of the problem will have to be
.Christmas decoratin g innovations, negotiated and approved by the
to the office and told her to give it Legislature.
to needy veterans.
The gove rno r: Ohio Senate
. · Lee said that instead of trying to President Stanley Aronoff, Rdistribute the donated mqney, the Cincinnati; William Preiffer, an

AMultimedia Inc. Howop11pe(

Campaign
•
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promise 1s
fulfilled.

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R~VENSWOOO

1U8Gtiono, 110 P.-

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis--Point Pleasant, December 29, 1991

COUNTY

2. Stay away from drugs and
alcohol.
3. Stay in close contact with your
family.
Thanks for your love, for your
concen~· and for a fine meal. AD are
greatly appreciated. •• TERRY
MystudentsleaJnedmorethatday
from our "new friends" thtiJ they
learned all year from books. ••
JANET S., SHOREVIEW, MINN.
DEAR JANET: So did some
others. Thanksforanunusualleucr.
Gem of the Day (Sent in by
William Lederle, NJ.): Maybe we'd
better stop complaining so much
about what's wrong with this world.
God might want to take it back 10
the shop
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T._ • ·
Drugs are everywncr&lt;. =Y re
tas~ ro get, easy 10 lise alld even
easlt~ to get hooked on. I[ you have
quesnon~ abow d~~gs, you need Ann
Landers booklet, The Lawdown on
Dope." Selld a se/f-Dddressed, long.
businus-size tnW!lope and a check
or money order for $3.65 (this
convertible bond is one carry·
includes postage and handling) 10: ingAthe
stipulation that it may be
Lowdown, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. exchanged for a specifric amount
Bol 11562, Chicago. Ill. 60611 - of stock in the company that issued
0562. (In Canada, send $4.45.)
it.

OLDSMOBILE

Rain likely. HIP today In 40s

•
tmts •

.·OLDS·

CHEVROLET/GEO

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Inside

After a complicated year, where
do we go from here? • Fred Crow A·2

B-1

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wa~

B!
cited fo llowing a two-vehicle
Ttmes-Senltnel Starr
a_cctdcnt on sta~ Route 160m Gal&lt;?ALLIPOLIS - The Gallia- ltpohs Townshtp Thursday afterMetgs Post of the State High way noon.
.
Patrol reponed )lfllbm~ s;x wrecks
Accordmg to a patrol r~por.t,
· lately. One mmor mJury was Robert D. Scott, 22, of Galhpohs
reponed as.a result.
was so uthbound on Rout e 160
Accordmg to the pat~ol, Mark when a car dnven b_y C~arles I.
. A. Cremeans, 32, of Gallipolis was Marlin, 46, of. Galhpohs Ferr.y
east\Jound o~ Teens ~un m Clay pulled from the berm and mto hts
Townshtp Fnday evenmg when he path.
,
,lost control of his 1986 Chevrolet
Damage to Scott .s, 1987
. ~avalier. The em: went o~f the right Chevrole~ S-10, and Martin. s 1979
.stde of the road mto a dttch, came Oldsmobtl~ Cut!as~, was l~sted as
back onto the road, crossed the . light. Martin lf'as cued for tmproproadway, struck a dttch and over- er starung.
.
turned onto its top.
A Pomeroy .woman. ~as cued
Cre~eans was tran sported by after a two-vehtcle colhston at the
the Gallia County Emergency Med- mtersecuon of Dyesville ~oad and
.teal Servke to Holzer Medica l Stan~an R~ad 10 Colum.bta TownCenter wherehe ~~ .~ eated and shtpmMetgsCountxFndaymomreleased for mmo~ IDJunes.
mg.
.
The patrol esumaiCd damage to
Accordtng to the patrol,
the ear all hea_vy and di~b.ling. Cre· Theodore F. Palmer, 50, of Albany
mea,ns was ct~ for drivmg under was southbound on .Sta~~an ~oad
ih~ mfluence, frulure to control and when a !990 Honda C_m c dnven
failure to -:v~aseatbelt.
by Jenntfer Y. Shest.na, 31, of
· A Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., man
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~omeroy

_went Jeti of center at the
· mtersectmn and st r~ck his 1987
Chevrolet C-10 head-on.
. Damag.e to both vehicles was
ltsted as hght. Shestina was cited
for left of center.
A Worthingto n man was cited
followmg a three-vehicle accident
on stat~ ~oute. 248 m Chester
Tow nshtp m Me1gs County Thursday afternoon.
. According to the patrol, Gregory
T. Hayman, 30, of Long Bottom
was westbound on Route 248 when
an eastbound ·vehicle, driven by
Edward L. Amott, 31, went left of
center and struck the left side of his
1983 Dodge Ram pickup.
.
Hayman's truck then went off
the right side of the road and struck
a parked 1980 Chevrolet C-10
owned by Keith L. Stout of Long
Botil:lm.
Damage to Amott's 1991 Toyota was listed as light Damage to
Hayman's truck was listed as modcrate and damage to Stout's truck

was listed as light.
Arnott was cited for left of center.
No huma ns were injured, but
several hogs were killed when a
tractor and semi-trailer rig ran into
a group of hogs on state Route 160
in Huntington Township in Gallia
County Friday afternoon,
According to the patrol, Charles
E. Whitt, 30, of Crown City was
so uthbound on Route 160 and
struck several hogs on the roadway.
Damage to Whitt's 1980 International was listed as light. No
citations were issued.
A Patriot woman's ear sustained
light damage in a deer-ear accident
on state Route 325 in Raccoon
Township in Gallia County Friday
morning/
The patrol reported Lizzie
McGinnis 59 was nonhbound on
Routll 325 and struck a deer, eausing lig ht damage to her 1990
Dodge Omni. The deer continued
on.

chnstmas trees to mulch

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
City and Gallia County officials are
making "a small but sincere gesture," according to a notice from
the County Engineer's office, to
help alleviate the problem of overloaded landfills and unsightly trash ..
Beginning Friday, Gallipolis
began curbside pickup for all discarded live Christmas trees. "Our
city crews will pick up unwanted
trees and take them to the Gallia
County Highway Department on
state Route 160 where they will be
turned into mulch," City Manager
Glenn Smith said.
Tbe Gallia County Commissioners and County Engineer have
coordinated a program with the
mayors of county communities
where anyone wanting to help save
landfill space and contribute
towards recycling effons can drop
of( trees at the GaUia County Highway Garage and the following
locations:

•

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CHESHIRE - Village maintenance building.
CENTERVILLE - side lot
nex t to the old school building.
CROWN CITY - fire station.
RIO GRANDE - next to the
recycling boxes.
VINTON - nex t to the recycling boxes.
County Engineer lames Baird
asks people recycling"their trees 10
remove all ornaments, wire hangers
and non-biodegradable ttems from
their trees prior to setting them up
for pickup. The wire and ornaments
have a tendency to dull the chipper's shredder blades.
Mulch may be picked up Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 4
p.m., at the Gallia County Highway
Department by any non-profit or
civic-minded organizatton on a
first-come, first-served basis.
Mulch distribution will continue
while supp~es last.

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Commentary and per~.p~ctiv~

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December 29, 1991

WASHINGTON - The Social
Securily Administration is wasting
about $30 million a year on nurs·
ing-home patients who are double
dippers and may not even know it.
The federal government pars a
"supplemental security income ' 10
people who are 65 or older: blind
or otherwise disabled and who
have limited income and resources.
The benefit consists .of a federal
and, in some cases, a s1a1e compo·
nent. Recipients can collect up 10
$407 a month : but once they
become eligible for Medicaid for example, when they move imo
a nursing home and Medicaid is
paying the bills - then the pay·
ment drops 10 a maximum of $30 a
month.
A federal study found that the
Social Security Administration
relies on these new nursing-home
patients to notify the federal gov·
ernment lhat it is time to cut back
on their supplemental security
income. But, as the study shrewdly
observed, new nursing-home rest·
dents often don't have the menial
or physical capacity to make that
call.
Even if lhese elderly people
don 't want to be double dippers,
they may be unintentionally col·

825 Third Ave., Galli poll~, Ohio

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

(614) 446·2341

(614)99l·llS6

·

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsber·Controller

HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press
: Association and the American Newspaper Pobli•bers Association.
•
·
:
•
:

•

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than
300 words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number: No unsigned letters will be
published.- Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not
personalities.
.

Former
PUCO member
.
~w both sides of dispute
J,

:.
By THOMAS SHEERAN
;:
Associated Press
•: CLEVELAND - Before heading to the academic world, David
Sweet served as a Slale utility regula10r and saw both sides of the issue of
~n meetings for setting utility rates.
·
•: Sweet, now dean of tbe urban affairs college at Cleveland Slate Uni·
v.ersity, served as a member of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
~em 1975-78 as an appointee of Gov. John Gilligan.
·: .His tenure witb the agency began before the slate's open meetings law
~uired the PUCO to open its rate-selling meetings to the public. His
te11ure ended afler the requirement went into effect.
: :.With good points on both sides, ·'It's like any complicated issue,'' said
Sweet He described himself as an early supponcr of the "sunshine law"
re.quiring open meetings involving lj!e PUCO boards and commissions.
: • The issue has re-emerged in the form of a recommendation by a Iask
nice named by Gov. George Voinovich to review Slate government effio~ ncy . The Iask force suggested exempting the PUCO rate-making hear·
ings from holding public meetings.
~ · The governor hasn't acted on the recommendation and his spokesman,
G\irt Steiner, said the issue isn't a top priority with Voinovich.
~ · Sweet said the open meetings law took its toll on open discussions
'1'1tcn PUCO members were required to meet publicly when setting utility
r~s.

lccting money they aren't entitled
to. Or, the person who manages
their finances is hoping the govern·
ment won't notice.
If the nursing -home resident
doesn't notify the governmenl, it
takes about three months for any'
one in Washington to notice Ihe
double dipping. Then, the govern·
ment tries, without much success,
to get the money back:. About half
of these over-payments are wrinen
off as a loss.
The Health and Human Services
Department inspector general, tile
office thai exposed the accounting
problem, has a solution -demand
Ihat nursing-home officials notify
the federal government the day
they lake in a patient who is receiv·
ing supplemental security income
and who will be getting MediCaid
too. Social Security can make this
change without an act of Congress,
so Ihis hole in the government's
pocket may be sewn shut soon.
The inspector general's report
shows how the department can
spend about $500 billion a year
without pulling a dent in the prob·
terns of the homeless and unin·
sured. It appears that some of the
money is squandered due to lousy
accounting and fraud .

Dec~mbe~~. ~,991 :
.

.

..

. It isn't-justliureaucratic clumsi·
ness Ihat costs money. Social Security has a fuU-time job policing con
artists who see the agency as an
easy mark.
Here 'are some of the Social
Secutity scam artists arrested in the
past year:
- A Minnesota man and hi-s
daughter swindled a 90-year-old
woman and her mentally rewded
nephew out of S120,000. The
father-daughter learn was hired to
clean the elderly woman's home
and soon talked her retarded
nephew inlo marrying the daughter.
The daughter then lOOk over man·
agement of the elderly aunl's
money and cashed all of her
..checks, including Social Security.
Before long, they stashed the old
woman in a nursing home, sold her
condo and bought a house with
money borrowed in the nephew's
name.
- A dentist was sentenced 10 "
four months' house arrest and fined
$23,000 for cashing $55,000 in
benefit checks that were sent 10 his
mother. The problem was, his
mother had been dead for years.
- A Texas woman stole her
brolher's Social Security benefits
by filing as his payee when he was

;. " There's no question it inhibits fqnk and candid exchanges, some·
thing that's useful in decision-making,.. said Sweet, who served as Slale apnnuH
~nomic development directorfrom. 1971 · 75.
\'--1"-"' Jc:: .,, ?'r"\ L_.Q
;.'fhe reduced wiUingness to be candid wasn't limited to executives of
tlillities, he said. Sweet noticed a similar change involving representatives
c&gt;
ot i:onsumer groups under tbe sunshine law.
'!f{'V'I:..\1
: · "You can oftentimes have far more candid exchanges (in private meet· I~\
ipgs) regardless if you're tallcing about consumer groups, utilities or many 1
o( the constituencies you have 10 deal with."
;. But those discussions become more reserved under tbe sunshine law,
~wee t said, because people trying to make their case "don't necessarily
w~nt their candid comments on the front page of the next day's newspa·
per.
: . A consumer group, Citizen Action, has denounced the task force rec·
orjlmendation 10 allow the PUCO to meet privately on rate issues.
: • Jennifer O'Donnell with the group's Cleveland office said consumers
would be adversely affected by such closed-door meetings. She highlight·
cd lhe issue Dec. 16 by bringing a box of cigars to a PUCO meeting, sug·
¢esting the stogies would be useful for closed "smoke-filled rooms"
During the li1st seve~al ~eeks
lfivolving commissioners.
.
there
has been much van~ty tn the
; . J. Michael Biddison, the only commissioner at the hearing, said the
news.
Probably Ihe most !mporiant
~ve-member commission hadn't discussed the issue and felt, from his
deall w1th the slluauon .m Russ13
~\Vn point of view, that rate-setting hearings should remain open to the
and the former Soviet Umon. .
public.
Thts mauer tS so c~!"Ph~ated
•. Any change in the PUCO's requirement to hold open meetings for set·
no o~e secn:ts to know who s on
t1Qg ulility rales would be up to the Legislature.
: Craig A. Glazer, PUCO chairman, decl ined to comment on the propos· ftrst. Ccriamly we hope that w11l
ql, saying it was a matter for the General Assembly 10 decide.

THERE,

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I SAID IT.

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temporarily hospitalized for a ner-·
vous breakdown in 1,966. Years·
later, when the brother turneil 65
he.;filed for his retirement a.nd
found that his sister, whom he had'
no1 seen for 23 years, had collected.
$87,000 on his behalf.
- A Texas man used his job al ,
a credit bureau to find the Social ,
Security gumbers of people who:
had good credit. Then he sold those ·
numbers for $800 each to people .
who had similar names, but bad .
credit.
RED TI\.PE- Washington has ,
made a big show of pressuring the:
Chinese government to grant exit
permits to dissidents and the rami- ,
lies they left behind in China. But ·
the case of Hu Ai-Nong shows that'·
good intenlions get losl in the
bureaucracy. Hu has been trying 10
get out of China for 14 months to
join her 75-year-old molher, c;:;e .
Yang, who fled political persecution in China. Ge now Jives alone ·
under impoverishe(l conditions in ,
Brooklyn, N.Y.. The Chinese gov- ·
ernment granled Hu a passpon and .
exit permit 14 months ago, but the
U.S. Embassy in Beijing won't •
give her a visa. She is not an unde· ·
sirable. The only thing that is keep· .
ing her aul of the United States is ·
red Iape that the State Deparuncnt "
is slow to unianglc.
MINI -EDITORIAL - New ·
White House Chief of Staff Sam
Skinner drove himself to work on .
his f~rst day. It was a show of thrift
that contrasted with his predecessor
John Sununu who was known for
takin g government-chauffeured
limos on his personal jaunts. Bul
by putting himself behind the
wheel, Skinner does not necessarily
prove a point. When he was Trans·
portation Secretary, Skinner took·
$40,000 worth of flying lessons
and charged them to the taxpayers.
His excuse was that he felt obliged ..
to learn every facet of the trans- ·
poriation business from the ground ,
up. What that means is that the
only difference between Skinner ·
and Sununu may be that Sununu
likes chauffeurs, while Skinner can
fly and drive any form of trans-poriation thai the Iaxpayers furnish
him.

Where are we heading?_·___B_:_y_F_red_W._.c_ro_w

.

ANew Year's resolution
:. At the siart of a new year, one
!laditionally resolves to improve
conditions in lhe year ahead. Be it
t~e betterment of ones physical
condition that could result from a
cliange in eating habits or lifestyle,
be it tile beuerment of one's Jiv.
ipg environment that could result
fr(lm a more conscious effon 10 be
slmsilive to lhe world around them,
tti'e beginning of a new year is a
ti])le to take inventory of one's
q'.Jality of life and idenufy ways in
1'/hich it can be improved.
·: In ~eeping with this tradition,
and in recognition of the need for
all Americans 16 be more sensitive
til; conditions governing their
e~ryday lives, the pledge I intend
tQ.'make this New Year's, and one I
wt-uld encourage all of my fellow
citizens to make, is to buy Ameri·
whenever possible. To some I
sl(.'ipect this will sound trite and
simplistic, bul SlOp and think about

or

can
it.:

•The United States is losing
thoosands of jobs each year to for·
ei4n markets. The volume of count·
)ess domestic~lly produced prod ucts has fallen precipiiOusly either
llttause these products can be produced more ine~pensively elsewhere, or because the market share
for' domestic producers· has shrunk:
wilramatically that these manufact~rs can no longer susiain their

••'

worth making
Cong. Clarence Miller

product lines. Only this past week,
General Motors, the world's largest
corporation, announced massive
layoffs to conform to the compa·
ny's shrinking market share. If
rcduc1ions conlinue as projecled,
by 1995 G.M. will have halved the
workforce it employed in 1985.
We as a country practice a poli·
cy of free trade. We are signatories
to a series of international trade
pacts dedicated to open markets;
and personally I feel that as long as
such trade is fair, we need to main·
tain s110ng inlernational trade rcla·
tionships.
Therefore , I am basically
opposed to the rigid protectionist
approach advocated by some that
would essentially seal off our
shores from foreign imports. While
I recognize the need for the imposi·
tion of tariffs on some foreign
products in o(der to maintain those
domeslic industries critical to
national security, I feel trade barriers in general are counterproductive to our long-term eco'nomic
well being.
Having said that, and having
acknowledged that our government
is obligated, by the pacts it is party
to, to work for the removal of arti·
ficial trade barriers, what alterna·
tives remain open 10 us as citizens

foday in history ·
•:
·
By Tbe Associated Press
:·Today is Sunday, Dec. 29, the 363rd day of 1991. There are two days
J&lt;#l in the year.
•:Today's Highlight in l:lisaory:
·
Dec. 29, 18"90, the Wounded Knee massacre took place in South
aikota. Some 300 Sioux Indians were killed by U.S. troops sent to disarm
. thl!m. About 30 of the soldiers were slain.
; '()n this dale:
.
::rn 1170, Archbishop Thomas Becket was murdered in Canterbury
Cpl!ledral in Enaland.
.
,·In 1808, the 17th president of the Uniltd Slates, Andrew Johnson, was
t$n in Raleigh, N.C.
·ln 1813, the British burned Buffalo, N.Y., during the War of 1812.
:•In 1837, Canadian militiamen destroyed lhe Caroline, a U.S. stcamboai
~ked at Buffalo, N.Y.

:·On

to reverse this condition of fleeting
jobs and Heeling good fortune?
If we are to reverse the spiraling
production trends that exist in our
manufacturing sectors, one of the
most effective and equitable ways
to do so would be for our country's
consumers to make a conscious
effort to give preference 10 tile pUr·
chase of American made products.
By buying American, by buying an
appliance or article of clothing
made in Ihis country, versus one
made by a foreign competitor. we
will be helping a friend, neighbor,
or relative keep their job and keep
their dignity.
As I mentioned earlier, there are
some in 'this country advocating
thai we lurn away _from all forms
of foreign involvement, that we
retreat to "Fortress America." At
the same time, many (Jf these same
people feel we can continue to
maintain our preeminent position in
the world both politically and mili·
tarily.l'm here to !ell you that"you
· can't get there from here."
If we were 10 shut ourselves off
from an active role in international
affairs, we would leave the shape
of the fulure for olhers to form.
When one realizes how close Sad·
dam Hussein came to attaining a
nuclear capability, when one SlOps
to reflect on the global nature of
many of the economic and environ·
mental problems thaf e~ist, one
can't help but conclude that we
would be doing ourselves a grave
disservice by turning away from an
aciive role in world politics and
world commerce.
·
We must remain a· viable and
responsible par1ner in the global
community, and if we are 10 remain
viable, we must res10re the siand·
ing of American commerce. By
buying American, by flying Ameri·
can, by vying for American made
products, we as consumers will be
giving our nation's sluggish econa·
mx a much-needed shot in the ann.
-Repeal after me, I pledge...

a woman was picked up at a bar
and spent most of the night drink·
ing and carousing with a male.
Then she wonders why she had
been atiackcd. This case was ccr.tainly a defeat for females who arc
raped on a date situation.
To many American cilizens, this
case was disiaSteful. Under the circumsiances, it appears the prosecu·
tion did not have a good enough
case 10 prosecute and was inept in
its performance. It appears that TV
is only interested in selling ads and
not what is good for this country.
Who can forget the hearing on
the appointment of Clarence
Thomas 10 the U.S. Supreme
Courl? The U.S. Senate made asses
of themsel ves by staging a
grandiose carnival for the so·callcd
benefit of the American public .
Judge Thomas and his former
friend, Aniia Hill, swore under oath
to contradictory stories. One of
these individuals had to be lying.
Both avpcarcd to be substantial
U.S. ciuzens.
Ms. 'Hill's story , if true, was
about 10 years too late 'in being
told . The mam unsolved question
in this story is who was lying and
why? Anyhow, the majority of the
American public felt it was an
injustice to Judge Thomas, and that
Judge Thomas should and did
receive his appointment. The sad
thing about this case is that every·
one lost, including the viewers.
Public hearings such as this should
never have been aired. Again, TV
wants to sell products which would
be used or consumed by our good
ciiizens.
One of the saddest programs
that Ihe writer experienced was that
of "Magic" Johnson, who went
public wilh his contracting of
AIDS . In essence, he indicated to
Connie Chung of CBS he had been
immoral and had sexual contact
with many ladies.
To many of the liberal thinkers,
his acknowledgment that he had
this disease was praised by them .
"Magic" made the statement that
he was telling his story in order 10
prevent others frbm doing the
· same. In one sense this is com·
mendable, but in another, it shows
that he was a completely immoral
person.
The writer feels that "Magic"
Johnson is one of the top basketball
players that ever lived or played the
game and should be remembered
for his action on the court, and not
for his action with the ladies.
One or the bad effects of this
kind of publicity is lhat it desi!Oys
lhe taith of the young (under 16)

·'

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athletes in him. I, personally, do
not think "Magic" is a hero in this
matter, but is rather like the young '
child who got his hand caught in ·
the cookie jar. "Magic" should be ·
spanked, not praised.
Did you hear that the U.S. had
clamped down on Egypt for using ·
too many condoms, sent to them by
our government?
Our government investigated :
and discovered thai these sex
objects were being used by Egyp·
tian children as balloons. They :
were sem 10 try and suppress the ·
AIDS epidemic. In this connection
these items were probably donated .
and paid for by the U.S.
·
Oh, well, what docs it matter to
Uncle Sam, so long as the Egyptian
children have a good time. Again,
couldn'l Eg ypt send us a few ·
camels in exchan ge? Our children '
would love to have a camel for ·a
house pet. The zoos also would pay ,
a pretty penny to have another
camel. Whatever happened to the '
expression, I would "walk a mile '
for a camel?"
'
Th e month of December has
been full of adverse economic con- ·
ditions. General Motors has indi · ·
catcd that it is going to make many ·
layoffs and possibly close some
plants.
lhc politicians arc talking abeut
a recession. Each political party is
blaming the other for this condi ·
tion . There is so much negative
news on the economic condition of
our country that sooner or later we · :
are going to talk ourselves inlo .
either 'a depression or a recession. ·
Ccrlainly this will be ·a key issue in ·
our forthcoming presidential cam- '
paigns. The TV covenl'ge of the · :
~ews is slanted towards the ncga- , :
u~

. .

•

By Jack Ander~on
and Dale Van litta

.

How about Ihe rich ball clubs · :
buying the best ball players. Sooner :
or later all the wealthy clubs will ·
acquire the best ball play.crs. What : :
happens to baseball and our kid' s :
faith in our baseball teams.
Rupe, all the above reported · ·
incidents were documcnlcd in our :
news media and they were topics of · ·
conversation in all home s anq , :
places where our citizens gathered. :
Arc we going to Hell in a hand· . ·
basket? · ·
Carry on .
,
Editor's note • Long-time ::
Attorney Fred W. Crow is the ·
contributor or a weekly column :
for The Sunday Times-Sentinel. :
Readers wishing to applaud, crit· : •
icize or comment on any subject · ,
(except religion or politics). are ;
encouraged to write to Mr • . ·
Crow, in care of this newspaper. ::

. Weather ·

all of Mason and Clarence R. Kef·

•· Ernest H. Covert
. '

GA,LlJPOLIS -. Merri.U D.
GALUPOL!S. ~ Ernest H.
Caldwell, 74. of tile Mercerville · Covert, 7~~ 640 Linwood Drive,
Community, die!l Friday morning, Rio Giande, died Th~Y· . .
g::;~1, 1991, •t Holz~r Medical
Born J.ply ·1·( , 1913 in Adams
. Born Feb.' 24 •. 1917, in G.uf.ln County; son of t~e late Arthur
'fownship 10 Gallia County, he WaS. Cloyd and Mildred Mac -Brand
lie :was the.relire(l manager
lh e son of the .liile J8J!Ies and Cora .Covert,
of Credit Thrift of Amenca
_' in GalBeaver.CaldweU.
· .
He is. survived 'by his wife, lipolis'. H(l 1wai abo ·Jh~ former
.
AI a 1o Cald
manager of the·Ci'ty Loan.- &amp; Savwell, to whom be ing~ offic~s in Pomeroy and
tr e .,us"
was married Aug. 11; 1946. .
Portsmouth, and of Park: Loan in
Also surviving are: six daugh· B 'I
ters, Barbara Ann Johnson ef
eX~tite time of his ·d~th. he was
Hebron, Ind., Alice King of Akron, the zonihg officer for the village of
Marilyn Gillespie of Chivpewa Rio Gnande.
.
Lake, Sandra Holstein of Btdwell · He was a member of Simpson
Linda Kay Caldwell of Crown City !Jnited Methodist Church, tile Rio
. and Janet Racer of Gallipolis; ~o · Grande Lions Club and CentreviUe
sons, Memll Jr. of Crown City _and L
3 F&amp;
Jarne K
h f Gall'1 1d · odge No. 71, AM, Thurman.
s ennet o
PO ts; an
Surviving are four daughters,
13lrandchil~n.
&lt;t
Mrs . Mike (Vera) · Rundle of
!so surviVIng are twp ststers, Columl!us, Mrs':. tletty 'Burks of.
Alma Sanders of MercerVille and
Marie Rossiter of Scono..:n, and a Reyno)dsburg, Mrs. Bob (Barbara)
brother, Morton, of Gallipolis.
Rhea of Beavercreek, and Mrs.
Kelly (Paula) Counts of Rio
H
e
was preceded in death by Grande; three sons, Roger Coven ·
two sisters and one brother.
Retired from the Gallia County of Linc'aln, Neb., David Covert of
Granville, and Charles Covert of
Highway Department in 1984, he Thurman; 17_grandchildren and ·
was a member of the Old Siloam two great-grandsOn~; his first wife,
Church and an Army veteran of Mary Matheny Covert of Colum·
World War II. He was also a mem- ' bus; a sistel, Elmor Pullen of Albu·
ber of the Ve1erans of Foreign querque, 1'04.; apd a brother,
Wars Post 4464.
·
Lester Covert of Marion.
Services will be held lO a.p1. . ~e was also preceded in death
Monday at the Waugh·Halley · b h'
d '£ v· · · Ma
Wood Funeral Home in Gallipolis
Y ts secon WI e, lfgtnm
yes
with the Rev. Bruce Unroe official· Coven, on May 1, 1989, and by a
i ng . Burial will be in the brother and a sister.
Ridgelawn Cemetery' in MerServices•wiU be 2 p.m. Monday
cerville with Derrick Stormer, in the Cremeens Funeral Chapel,
wilh the Rev. W. Luth~ Tracy offi.
'Darry Stormer, James Caldwell, ciating. llurial1Will be in Riverview
Marion Caldwell, Donovan Cemetery, Middleport. Friends
Sanders and Merrill Ray Rossiter
11 the h 1s da fr
serving as pallbearers. Alternate may ca at c ape un Y om
24
pallbearers will be Carl Fillinger
'· A~Z;~~i:~ervice by Centre·
ant~~~ ~~~~~all S~nday from 2 ville Lodge No. 371, F&amp;AM ·will
to-4 p.m. and 7 10 9 p.m. at the be conducted in the chapel Sunday
at 7:30p.m.
runera I horne.
In lieu of flowers, donations
may be made to. the American
Heart Association.

Eldon M. Carman

POMEROY - Eldon M. Car·
man, 51, 8452 S.W. !84th Loop,
Beaverton, Ore., died at his resi·
dence on Dec. 24 following an
ex1ended illness.
He was ihe son of Lila Young
Carman of Chauncey, formerly of
P.omeroy, and the late Orville Car·
man.
Surviving are his wife of 32
years, Roberta Hassler Carman;
two sons aQd daughters-in-law,
Brad and Karen Cannan of Aloha,
Ore., and Brian and Laura Cannan
of BeaveriOn; one sister and broth·
er-in-law, Edna and Sam Stalder of
· Athens; one brother and sister-in·
law, William and Nan Carman of
El Sobrante, Calif.; four grandchil·
dren; one niece and nephew, Shari
Stalder Ferguson and Scott Stalder,
both of Athens; aunts and uncles,
Robert and Mildred Carman
Bowen, Earl and Lilah Carman
Frecker, and Ivan Cannan, all of
Pomeroy; and-father-in-law and
mother-in-law, Earl and Marge
Hassler of Dallas, Ore.
He was also preceded in dcalh
by grandparenls Denver and Edna
Carman of Pomeroy, and James
and Eldora Young of Nelsonville.
· Memorial services are to be'hcld
at the Little Chapel of the Chimes
in Portland, Ore. Arrangements are
by the little Chapel of the Chimes.

Charles LuptOn
GALLIPOLIS - Services for
Charles Lupton, 72, of Rio Grande,
were held Saturday, Dec. 28 at
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home's
Wetherholt Chapel in Gallipolis.
The pallbearers were Bucky
Berger, David Blackstone, Harry
Burnett, Mark Lupton , Rod Mor·
gan and Scotl Morgan.

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.,
South-Central Ohio .
30. High 40 to 4S,_:___._
.
. Sunday,, rain or drizzle likely,
Continued from A·l
·
. ·
Jack (Dowler), Mr. Wray and Gov- . mainly in the morning. Near steady
ernor Voinovich for their work. I lemperatures around 40. Chance of
·
: ;
hope you '11 continue to push for preeipiiation 70 percent.
.CLEVFLA.ND (AP) - ~are : :
this project"
Extended forecast:
Fnday night's Oltio Loucry ltlec-;,
At Friday's _press conference,
Monday through Wednesday
u~ns:
•:
Lows 25 10 35 and highs 30 to Ptek 3 Numbers
:•
Dowler implied that the state
would have been wining 10 fund a 40 each day. A chance of rain or
8·~·3
;:
. (e1ght, five, three)
,:
considerably more expensive por· snow Monday. Fair Tuesday. Out·
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tion of the project, from the Doreas look for Wednesday fair. U&gt;w near Ptck 4 Numbers
4-8·5-4
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area to the William R. Ritchie
&lt;four.
eight,
five,
four&gt;
•
Bridge at Ravenswood, W.Va.
Cards
.
However, the archeological and
VEI'ERANS MEMORIAL
5 (five) of Heans
historical studies have not been
FRIDAY
ADMISSIONS
10 (len) of Clubs
· ·c_ompleted for that $32 miQ.ion segBrenda
Darst,
Pomeroy.
5
(five) of Dialoonds
ment. Those studies are e&lt;qJected to
FRIDAY
DISCHARGES
A
(ace) of SpadeS
.
'
be completed by mid-summer.
Arlhur
Roush,
Ruth
Stearns
and
The
Super
LotiO
jackpot
is
$8
·
Dowler also addea that he will
ll)illion.
'
request funding for another section Harold Jeffers.
of the connec10r road next summer
after the environmental document
is complele.
Meanwhile, the first ponion of
the corridor was chosen. because
studies to date conclude that it has
th~ least environmental complicalions, according to Dowler.
A series of public meetings will
begin in the coming year 10 benefit
those property owners affe&lt;:led by
the proposed road. At that time,
and prior to property and right-Of·
way purchase, plans will be avail·
(All Winter Dresses)
able for review and ODOT engi·
neers will answer questioas.
Petite (4·1 0) '

Lottery numbers

MemU Calctwell

.

be resolved in lhe future. My only
concern at this time, is how much
money have we thrown away in
credit and subsi.dies. Is the old gov·
ernment responsible or will the
new government assume and pay
l.hese debts?
It is my feeling that the U.S.
will wipe the slate clean and
advance more money and credit to
the n~w governm~nt without any
quesuons or secunty asked by the
U.S.
Wouldn_'t it be possible to sell
good~, gram or whatever to the
Russta~s tn exc.hange for c1thcr
submannes or tanks? There arc
enough wealthy citizens in this
country who would just lov e to
have a lank setting in their garage.
Wouldn't II be wonderful to
drive down Main Street in
Pomeroy or Gallipolis, waving at
everybody -while. driving a Russian
tank? This would be a supreme
example of wealth and imaginary
success for the driver.
Seriously, there is no reason
why the Russian government, or
any ot~er government, in return for
U.S . atd, could not gtve the U.S.
gov-.rnment something in
exc~angc .. Then Uncle Sam could
sell these Items 10 our wealthy c1t1·
zens. So •. if the forei~n countr(s
Slluauon IS such that tiS money tS
no good, then the U.S. should try
the barter system with that country.
Then we had the Wtlltam
Kennedy Smith trial which was
televised all over lhe country. The
only thing missing was \he victim's
face and name. This trial sbeuld be
dubbed the "The Invisible Rape
Case", or "Who Removed Mama's
Pantyhose?".
. This story _resembled a three·
nng ctreus w!llch wouldhave top·
pled Barnum s best tn hts heyday.
The writer watched very liule of
thts trtal, but It seems to be a classic case of a man and woman
telling entirely different stories of
the event. Then how can a jury
determine which person was telling
.the trulh. Nonnally, in a case, such
as this, an acquittal will result,
since the state has the burden of
proving its case beyond a reason·
able doubt.
The fact that the defendant was
a relalive of the Kennedy clan
made it appealing Ia the curious
public. All of the ingredients of the
sex e~perience were aired and tele·
vised. Should a trial such as this be
on nationwide TV?
·
My own opinion is that il should
not, since it 1s anolher s1ep down·
ward in our moral plight.
This case is a classic case where

wv

Campaign ...

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OH-Polnt Pleasant,

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Crooks prey on Social Security recipients ·
A Division of

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WO&lt;XI of Deep Water; foilr sisters,
Grace A. Harvey of Pqe, WV,
Flora V, Eskridge of Eagle, WV,
Iris M. Barter of Cleveland; OH
and Mary C. McGniw of
Wenatehee;WA.
Service will be held Monday;
December 30, at 10 a.m. at tlie
Foglesong Funeral Hor!IC with Rev.
Bennie
Stevens · officiating.
Gtaveside services win be held at
1:30 p.m. Monday at Blue Ridge
Memorial ·Gardens in Prosperity,
WV.
Friends may Call at the funeral
home on .Sunday from 1·9 p.m.

Ch ar Ies Stephenson

POINT _PLEASANT • Charles
Leslie S~hcnson, 83, of Point
Pleasant, died Saturday, December
28, 1991, at Ple&amp;'!llllt Valley
Hospital.
·
He was a retired fanner, and for
21 years was employed as a bus
driver for the Mason County Board
of Education. He had also worked
at the Point Pleasant Livestock
Market for 32 years. A 1928
graduate of Point Pleasant Senior
High School, where he played
football and also attended Marshall
University, where he also played
football.
Born April 21, 1908 in Point
Ple.f!88Dt, he was a son of the late
Robert William and LiUy Mae
(Nixon) Stephenson. He was also
{l!eeeded in death by two brolher,
Hairy and Ce&lt;:il and two sisters,
Kathleen and Arleen.
He is survived by his wife, Mary
(CasiO) Stephenson; a daughters,
Mary Kay Berry of Wil6amstown;
two sons, Charles E. Stephenson of
Centerburg, OH and Robert Wil·
liam Stephenson of Cohimbus, OH;
a sisier, Pauline Lana of San Diego,
CA; seven grandchildren and two
great-grandchildren.
Service will be held at 2:30 p.m.,
Monday, December 30, at the
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant, with Rev. R.C.
Browning officiating. Graveside
services and burial wiU follow in
lhe Lone Oak Cemetery in Point
Pleasant.
Visiting hours will be held at the
funeral home on Sunday from 2-4
. p.m. and 7-9p.m.

Eugene German

LONG BOTTOM · Eugene T.
Gef!ltan, 84, 51659 Mount Olive
Road, Long Bouom, died Friday.
• Dec. 27, 1991 at Holzer Medical
Center followtng an extended ill·
ness.
Born in Long Bottom, he was Nina Yates
the son of the late Ben and Maude
POMEROY . Nina "Annie"
Sheldon Gennan. He was a chief Katherine Yates, 63, 225· Second
engineer for the Ohio Barge Line Street, Pomeroy, died Friday, Dec.
Company. He was a member of the 27, 1991 al herresidence.
Shade River Masonic Lodge No.
Born Feb. 28, 1928 in Rolandus,
453.
she was a daughter of the late
He is sur-vived by a special Ames and Leora Black Donovan.
friend, Pearl Powell, Long Bot10m; She was the man~ger of the Eagle's
a brother and sister-in-law, Carl Club in Pomeroy.
and Eileen German, Castlebury,
Sfie is survtved by two sons,
Fla.; and one niece, Mary Lou Charles Allen Vaughan, New
LeMarr, Florida.
York; and Thomas Eugene Vaugh·
Besides his parents, Mr. Gennan an , Athens; two sisters, Faye
was preceded tn death by five sis- Wolfe, Pomeroy; and Mae Smith,
ters, Mary Hooper, Garnett Mor- Pomeroy; and one brother, Clinton
gan, Lucille German, Irene Rhine- Donovan, Speeryville; Va.
hart and Eloise (last name
Besides her parents she was pre·
unknown).
ceded in death by her husband,
Upon Mr. Germ~n·s request, Samuel Yates; one son, Michael
there will be no calling hours . Bruce Vaughan; two brothers,
Craves ide services will be held Gilbert and Phillip Donovan; and
Monday at I p.m . at Sand Hill two sisters, Amy Eynon and Alice
Cemetery in Long Bottom with Beaver.
Rev. Alfred Holley officiating.'
Memorial services will be
Arrangements are under the announced at a la1er date.
direction of White's Funeral Home
Arrangements are under the
inCoolville.
direction of Ewing Funeral Home.

Loren M. Glassbur~
POINT -PLEASANT - Loren
M. Glassburn, 74, of Point Pleasant, formerly of Gallia County,
died Saturday, Dec. 28, 1991, at
Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
Pleasant.
·
Arrangements will be made by
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home.

Dfl"
ROWfl"

Helen Hedrick
CLIFTON • Helen L. "Snooky"
Hedrick, 64, of Clifton, dij)(!
Friday, December 27, 1991 at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born April I, 1927 in Union,
'WV, sbe was a daughler of the late
Everett 0. and Julia E. (NoUge)
Kerwood.
Survivors include her husband,
Walter G. Hedrick of Clifton; four
brothers, Paul E. Kerwood, James
R. Kerwood and John L. Kerwood
.

TRIO

•SUNDAl DEC. 29

8:00P.M.
Morrie and Dorothy Haoldne
Ariel Theatre
426 2nd Ave., Gelllpollo, Oh.
C.II441-ARTS lor more Info

-.

COLONY VIDEO
NEW YEAR'S SPECIAL
RESERVE NDWI
ON TUESDAY, DEC. 31, RENT

5 TAPES FOR $5 °0 or
10 TAPES $1 0°0

Hospital news

DOF

CL

•DRESSES

Misses (4·20)

COLONY THEATRE
FRIDAY THRU THURSDAY

•ALL SWEATERS
ALL
•TURTLENECKS

ALL I WANT FOR
CHRISTMASG
ONIIVINING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION $1.50
446·0923

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4514

OFF•••

" ·.: : ...

' IMilllll MTI.U DillY tlll"'l JAILS

IMUIII 11111811' TUt:SIIAl.

ltlo.~

Beauty...
'"'Beast
(01

l.::ZO,J :20,7 :ZO,

t :DO

ALL COATS
s•ort Wool Coats

ALL WINTER

lo•g Wool Coats

SPORTSWEAR

40%on

~TO ~OFF

l : 20.3 :20,1 :20,

LAFAYmE MALL

~ : 20

ELLIOTT'S
1 Big DayTuesday, Dec. 31st
DUE TO BAD TIMES WE
.
MUST LIQUIDATE ALL
FLOOR SAMPLES AND
MODELS BEFORE 1:992.
DON'T MISS THIS
BIGGEST SALE OF THE
YEAR.

,·

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CASH AND CARRY
..

KE.P UNfiL FRIDAY, JAN. 3
IIEW RELEASES EXCLUDED

NINTENDO &amp; NEW RELEASES

3 FOR$5°0
446·0923

J

,•

Beside Riverfront Honda-431 Pike Street

Kanauga, OIL.

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Page-A4-Sunday Times · Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpotls, OH-Polrit Pleasant, WV

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December 29, 1991

•

GALLIPOLIS - A South Point woman was abduc.ted and
assaulted tate Friday night and early Saturday morning by a man
who was hiding in the back of her car.
.
According to the Gallia County S.heriff's Department, Mehssa
Johnson, 19, of South Point got into her vehicle at approxunately
11:45 p.m. at lhe Holzer Medical Center parking lot She drove to
the mterseclion of state Route 160 and U.S. Route 35 wh~she
noticed a man in the back seat who said, "Guess who? Surpnse," a
report said.
•
.
According to the report, Johnson was told to drive the way she
norma ll y drove. The man asked her money and beathderThw.1th a shoe
when she told him she didn't have any, the report sa1 : e man go1
ou1 of the car at the roadside rest north Of Crown Cuy • the report
added.
· ·
The man is described on the report as black, about 6-feet·ta_ll
with a medium build and a tooth missing near the front of hiS
mouth.

Theft of canoe reported

·

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Police Department IS currently
probing the theft of a c~oe from a Gallipolis man 's residence. .
Acco rding to a pohce report, Dr. Ke1th Brandeberry of FlfSl
Aven ue reported tile canoe was stolen frQm his.patio Thursday
where it was pad-locked and. chained to the pauo rad.
. ·
The canoe is a silver, IS-foot Grumman made of alummum. The
identifica tion number is 8176315. The boat regtstrauon number 1s
08202HC and the Ohio decal number is 056498.
The theft makes the second canoe theft reported recently. A 16• · foot fiberglass canoe was stolen from the Robert ~royles residence
on Garfield Avenue Tuesday mornmg or Monday mght.

Four incarcerated overnil(ht
GALLIPOLIS -Four people were recently incarcerated in the
Gallia County Jail. Incarcerated were: Andrew N. Russell, 19, of
Bidwell, arrested and incarcerated Saturday morning for disorderly
conduct after warning; Noah D. Lamm: 20, of Crown City, arrested
and incarcerated Saturday morning for no operators license; Jerry T.
Bradley, 20, of Gallipolis, arrested and incarcerated Saturday mom•• ing for domestic violence; Karen J. Spurlock , 35, of Springfield,
:: arrested and incarcerated Saturday morning for possession of a controlled substance, safety belt, no headl ights, driving under lhe innu• encc and improper use of lane.
'"
Library receives book donation

• GALLIPOLIS- The Gallia County Gun Club recently present·
·: ed several books to the Bossard Memorial Library in Gallipolis.
They are: "On the Wings of a North Wind: lhe Waterfowl and Wet·
lands of America's Inland Flyways" by Michael Furtman in memo. ry of Lawrence "Panza" Bastiani; "Wetlands of Nonh America" by
William A. Niering in memory of Frank "Chink" Haskins; "American Duck Shooting" by George Bird Grinnell in memory of Harry
W, Holderby.

McArthur man dies in fire
McARTHUR (AP) - A man living in his camper died when lhe
vehicle caught on tire, officials said.
.
Cluster Bens, 47, died in a fire Thursday that destroyed h1s
camper near the border of Vinton and Hockmg counues m southern
Ohio, said Vinton County Shenlf Delno McClure. .
Betts lived in lhe camper part-ume, the shenff srud.
The McArthur Fire Department responded to the alarm at 7 p.m.
Thursday. Fire Chief David Gill said. . . .
The state fire marshal was invesugaung and county Coroner
David Walker said an autopsy would be performed on Betts.

Shriner$ to install officers
GALLIPOLIS -The Gallipolis Shrine Club will install of!icers

and observe ladies nightSaturdiiy;·Jan. 4' ' ed ·b ..din
..
Social hour wiU begin at 5:30p.m. fodow
Y n

6·30
· .

p.mMusic will be perfOlllled by George Hall. For more information
· call446-3882 or 446-3588.
,F
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OU stu«f.ent sought
Kr er OJ

ATHENS (AP) _ Police hope a $20,000 reward will bring
'information on the city's ftrSt drive-by shooting death.
.
.
Police are circulating reward posters acr?ss the state m the.lf
investigation of the fatal shooting of Oh10 Umv.erslty.student Dav1d
Kropsehot, 21, as he sat in tile living room of h1s rented house Nov.
24.
. . b .
Kropschot, of St David, Pa., was_ a senior majonng m usmess
and economics. Police said he had hved for several months m the
house four blocks from campus.
·
Police Lieutenant Jerry Elgin said a single 9 mm bullet passed
through Kropschot's carotid artery.
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"He bled to death in five minutes," Elgm sa1d Fnday. ~hree of
his roommates were there and tned to hetp, but there wasn t much

ther.h~~~~ur first drive-by shooting down here,"

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dark colored automobile with at least two people in it.
.
Kropschot's family has posted a $10,000 reward; Ohio Universi·
ty added $9,000 and $1,000 comes frOO) the Athens Cnme Solvers
organization.
·
"All the money is secured to be sure it is there to ~~y to anyone
with infonnation that leads to an arrest and md1ctment, . Elgm S31d.
Police had 300 reward posters printed and will circulate them in
the area as well as Cincinnati, Columbus and Cleveland, where
many OU students live.

Squads respond to six calls
POMEROY • Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service responded to six calls for assistance on Friday and early
Saturday morning.
On Friday at 8:52a.m. the Syracuse unit was called to Long Run .
Road for Max Folmer who was transported to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 1:36 p.m, the unit went to Township Road 275 for
Sadie Larkins w~o was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The Pomeroy unit, 4:03p.m. went to Route 124 for Leroy Watson who was laken to Veterans.
At 10:50 p.m. the Middlepon unit responded to Overbrook Center for Edgar Brewer who was transported to Veterans.
On Saturday at 5:23 a.m. the Middleport Fire Department and
emergency squad went to Village Manor for an auto fire. The unit
transported Jane Evans to Veterans.
At 7:37 a.m . the Racine unit went to Bald Knob-Stiversville
Road for Cora Michael who was trarisported to Veterans.

Meigs deputies'probe hit-skip
POMEROY· The Meigs County Sheriffs Department is investigating a hit-skip accident that occurred sometime between Thursday
evening and Friday on Pomeroy Pike in Chester Township.
According to the report, a smaller vehicle was traveling east on
Pomeroy Pike at an apparent high rate of sPeect and failed to make a
left turn going off the right into and damaging approximately 30
feet of (our-strand barbed wire fence on the Donald Mora propeny.
The vehicle continued east on Pomeroy Pike.
Robert Eads, Rutland, reponed Friday that a 22-calibur semiautomatic weapon was missing from his residence. He reported he
missed the weapon on Friday morning.
James E. Fish, Beech Grove Road, reported Thursday night at 9
p.m., !hat he struck a deer that ran into the path of his 1984 Buick as
he was traveling north on County Road 10. Moderate damage was
listed to tile front end of the vehicle. The deer fled the scene.

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.RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP)- Aluminum since Nov. 1, 1990. The
Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. said union said its members were locked
Friday it has filed a complaint al· tiut; Ravenswood Aluminum claims ,
leging unfair labor practices against they have been orl slrike.
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the United Steelworkers union · J'he complaint alk;ged the umon
Slemming from a 1-year-old labor members placed Jackrocks on •;
roadway at the plant and threw &gt;
for rocks and other objects at workers' · ·:
· msg:bie Boger,
the COinP.Ifly's Jackson County . vehicles as they paSsed the picket ; :
plant, S81d !fie latest allegations sites.
•
were aimed at "picket line miseon·
dueL" The complaint covered Sept.
Telephone calls to ' United
4 to Dec. I, Boger said.
Steelworkers Local 5668 in .•
About 1,700 l!llion workers have Ravenswood went unanswered ·
been off the job at Ravenswood Friday.

~~·:'::&gt;ver~Tho'fada/re:ip:~

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Aquino assures help for displaced
workers
.
Ba~~~:.:obla~~~,d=~

~;:~~~~b~n~~:,ax~[c~i~~

getti_ng_refunds this month .
.SUNOCO STATION LOCATED HERE. This corner at Sec·
ond Avenue aDd Grape, Gallipolis, housed the new Suncico Service
Station in 1955. The station was robbed two days after Christmas
that year.

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SALE!

Christmas in Gallipolis: 1955
By JAMES'SANDS
Special C11rrespondent
GALLIPOLIS - "GaUia County
and Galtipolis are aglow with the
spiritofChristmas.Homesandbusi·
ness places are decorated with a
number of outstanding · displays
and by the time of ,
the eventful eve
many families will
beunited.FromaU
points of the com·
passbavecomethe
college students
and servicemen. Organizations are at
work to aid tile needy.
· Rotarians raised over $800, and
will have more after a tag day to
supply at least 300·baskets. Tri-Hi-Y
and Key Clubbers have helped to
look after the county homes as well
as olher groups. The Legion and their
auxiliary held a most successful party.
Officepanieshavebeenontheagenda
all week and the largest was given by
the Ohio Valley Electric Corp. at the
Elks club. Kiwanians held their party
and heard Rev. Jerome Rodgers of
Pt. Pleasant talk about the spiritual
side of lhe holiday season."
.The above is the way Dwight C.
Wetherholt of The Gallia·Times ieported Chrisunas activities in and
around Gallipolis in 1955, a year in
which stated Wetherholt Gallia
County had an all time rec~rd high
number of grocery stores- 72.
Someofthe hot gift items in 1955
would have been: Presto Electric
Pressure Cookers at Central Supply
($29 95) Underwood typewriter from

Bloomington, .Ill. . Mutual the dividends for customers in the
Automobile Insurance Company is state because claim costs Were less
mailing premium refunds· totaling than anticipated.
$37.1 million to its auto insurance
Ohio is one of 12 states and one
customers in Ohio.
province where State Farm Mutual
· The refunds will be about 12.5 customers are sharing a totaJ of
percent of each individual's semi- more than $198.5 million in divianrtu.al premium. They are now dends. The refunds ate part of a
being mailed to 1,282,800 State dividend program under which
Farm policyholders over a six· State Farm has returned about $1.2
month period.
billion to its auto in.surance cusState Farm MQtual authorized tomers since 1971.

. and Silhouette". The Madrigal Club
gave a program at the high school
with Ruth Doepping conducting.
Grace Church offered the camata
..
''The Dawn of Chrisunas" by Ray
Nolte. Featured were Bill Brown,'
Campbell, Donna Johnson, Harriet
POMEROY · The three' Meigs
Clendenin, Ann Handway Brown, County school districts and the
Margi Betz, Delores Mossman , and Mei~s County Board of Education
Shirleen Wiseman.
Off1ce received a total of
In 1955 Christmas came on Sun- $718,464.24 in State School Founday.
dation Subsidy payments for
There was a tragedy just after December, according to a release
Christmas when lhe Sunoco Station · from the office of Thomas E. Ferat Second and Grape was robbed at guson, State Auditor.
Of the net amou.nt distributed
gunpoint. That station had been built
for
December $46,806.58 came to
earlier in 1955 with Alex Tcrezakis
the
county
board office. The breakas proprietor. Wilh 8 gallons of gasoline the station had given away a down of funding to the districts is
as follows: $135,021.96 to Eastern
hand painted Stewart Bud Vase.
·Local, $397,988.41 to Meigs
Mr. Terezakisoperatedthestation Local; and $138,647.29 to South·
for less tllan one year as it became in ern Local.
19561heHarrison'sSunocowilhAJva
Harrison as manager. The hours were
7 a.m. to 10 p.m. In 1956 Gallipolis
also had a Sunoco station at Second
FIITY Yi. ARS AGO TODAY
and Pine with•Homer K. Rowan as
the proprietor.
Dec, 29'
Sunoco's ads in the 1950's
bragged thai "Blue Sunoco" meets.
today's higher premium octane
standards and sells at regular gas
More Soviet troops land on
prices. Alva Harrison ran the Sta·
the eastern end ol tt1e·Crt100a,
tion only briefly for later in 1956 it
fprcing the Germans to halt ,
became Slone's Sunoco with James
Slone as owner and Herb Slone as
their anad&lt; on Sevastopol
assistant. The U-Haul franchise
while they deal with the
was soon added.
.
Invasion force. In the
S!ones stayed he.re Into the
Philippines, Japavet e ·
1970 s when 'th~ Statton beca~e
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planes·'.bomb Con'egidof
known as Sparky s. !twas Sparky s
for the llrst time. ·
up to the early 1980 s when the Sta·
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uon closed and the Neal Insurance
Galhpohs Typewnter Co. at .4~9 and Real Estate Company renovat· Source: "2194 Days ol War; W. H. Smllh
Second, milk g~ss fron:t White s ed the corner Jli'Operty.
PubMshers Inc.;.·world Almanac BooK of World
Wallpaper store, Kimball p1anos from
Wltr n;· Bison BOoks Corp .. 1981
the Becker Music store, Sunbeam
mixers from Womeldorff and
Thomas,"Everiing in Paris gift set
and cheeses from Butler Drugs, a
Brownie Camera from Kerr Drugs,
arid ·power tools for dad from
McKnight-Davies.
Moore's was a good place to go
for toys in 1955. WonderTinkertoys
were only 98¢, the Drink and Wet
baby doll went for $7.98, a tool chest
for $2.98, a load and dump truck for
$2.98 and for 98¢ ·one could buy
either the Beauty Kit or the Mr. Potato Head Kit.
The Tribune ran almost daily let·
ters to Santa Claus wilh one from
Frances Lou Baker of Lower River
Road getting right down to the speGoldstar
Multi Tech
cifics:
RCA
~~phonic
Sa111S119
"Dear Santa Claus, I would like a
ScoH
Cn~lg
basketball and net, boots size 62 with
Sa11desig• P•dco
Rhapsody
zippers, pocket watch, a small male
Zellt.
Emerson
Nlagnavox
Hotpaint
dog that can stay in the house,clothes
Fu~al
Shlntom
GE
J( Penny
and a .20 gage shotgun with 30 inch
barrel. My brother Lloyd would like
a little basketball, 4 wheeled bicycle,
6 wheeled truck, boots size 12, color
black, Big crayons, colored paper;
big paints, rubber knife, cork gun
with corks and four flags.
In holiday sports action, Gallia
391 WEST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
Academy beat Huntington High 9774 as John Milhoan set a school rec·
992·3524
ord with 53 points. He also had 20
rebounds. At Rutland, the Vinton
Tigers got 47 points from Lowell
Cardwell, but it was not enough as
Rutland also had a player (Tom
Cremmens) gct47 as Rutland won
83-82.
At the movies; the Colony was
showing "Tender Trap" with Frank
Sinatra and Debbie Reynolds. The
GaDipoli! Theatre had "7 Cities o
Gold" with Richard Egan, Anthony
Quinn, Jeff Hunter and Rita Moreno.
The weather was cold near Christmas though. Just after Christmas it
got very warm. Despite the weather
the Rio Grande Carolers came to
Gallipolis in mass. Later that week
the group presented at Community
Hall "The ','·Christmas Story in Song

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government will do its best to help abandon Subic, 50 miles wesl of •
cushion the economic effects of the Manila, by the end of ne~t year. :
U.S. Navy's pullout from Subic The Navy's departure_ will end
nearly a cea1ury of m~litary pres,
ence in this fQITIII:I' colony.
· . '
during a meeting with base repre- - Sljbic, a 60,000-acre base, is
home to about 5,800 troops arid
4,500 dependents. Together with
Subic, and his wife, Rep. Kate Gor· Clark Air Base, which closed last
don.
month it constituted the United
On Friday, Philippine and U.S. States: largest overseas military
officials said ihe__!J.S._ Navy will installation. ·
•

Ohio
State
Farm
citstomers
·
· ·
·
·

Meigs County

:POMEROY · David Shannon
B~ow ning, 26, was recentl y
re turned to Meigs County from
Giles County, Va.
According to Meigs County
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Browning appeared from the Court of
Common Pleas on a bill .of information on two counts of burglary
involving the 1989 burglary of the
Donald Guthrie residence on Elk
Run Road and the February 1990
burglary of the Wendell Hoover
residence on Old Route 33.
Judge Fred W. Crow III sen tenced Browning on the fir st
offense to a term of three to 15
years with actual sentence of three
years and on the second count of a
te rm of eight to 15 years. On the
second count the sentence was suspended and Brownin~ was placed
on fi ve years probauon to begin
upon completion of the sentence on
the 'first count.
The sentence is to run concurrent wi th his -sentence in Giles
Coun ty, Va. Brown ing was

Rhoilda, were at their son's bedside
"W~ believe that Shaun ii now · . Dec. l f'near the fooi6i!l sta4ium at 1
when he died, said Randy Sachs, in' an incredible place of constant Bishop McGuiness.
School, · l
spokesman for Baptist Medical joy and happiness and abundant where he graduated m 1 9.
.'
Center:
love. This belief does not lessen the
A weeK before the o~e~. the ·
"Rhonda and I bave given up to .almost unbearable pain of hi s sophomore at' the Un1versny of
God our first-born and oply son," loss."
·
Oklahoma at Norman pleaded no
Walters said in a statement released · . Oklahoma City police found contest to a m,isdemeanor c~ge oC ;
by tlle'hospilal.
Walters slumped over in his car possessing 4rug paraphernalia.

anti-depreisant drug. He had been
in a coma since last week.
MANILA, Philippines (AP) · Both the governor and hi,$ wife, President Corazon Aquino Satuday
assured Filipino base workers .her

~keswoman

BIG

Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-AS · '

l~ Governor's family mourns son's drug ov~rdose d~a.th · . _. . _;

charge against uni.oli

• re[ urned financial
France, Iran to settle
B rownzng
dispute
PARIS (AP)- France and Iran
will sign an acco~ Sunday ending
a $1 billion rmanctal dispute daung
from the 1979 Islamic ·revolution,
French officials say.
Vice-foreign ministers Francois
returned to Virginia on Thursday to
Scheer
of France and Mahmoud
resume his serving time.
Vaezi
of
Iran will sign the agreeIn the plea bargain agreement
ment
in
Tehran, the officials
with the Prosecuting Attorney's
announced
Friday.
Office, Brownin~ assisted the
Details have not been disclosed.
dcparunent in cleanng the breaking
But
Iran 's official Islamic Republic
and entering of the vacant
News
Agency said France agreed
Woodrow Wilson house on Route
to
pay
$1
billion to Iran. ,
68 1 at Snowville that occurred in
The
money
was invested by
August 1989, as well as the break·
Iran's
late
monarch,
Shah Moham·
ing and enterings of the George
mad
Reza
Pahlavi,
in
the European
Hart and the David Hudnal resi dences on Old Route 33 in Febru· uranium enrichment consortium,
Eurodif, in 1974.
ary 1990.
Also cleared was the February
1990 breaking and entering of the tody in accordance with the InterLarry Pyle residence on MacGinnis state Agreement on Detainees Act.
Sheriff Soulsby reports, that the
Road , near the Athens County
only
items recovered were the
Line, as well as the entering of the
video
cassette recorder from the
old Mona Miller property on Route
Guthrie
residence and from the
681 East.
Hoover
residences. They were
As' part of the probation, Brownrecovered
February 1990 shortly
ing is 10 cooperate in lhe investiga· after the in
tion and prosecution of others entering. Hoover breaking and
involved in the breaking and enter·
According to the statement from
ings.
Browning,
the items were disposed
Browning was able to have been
of
at
various
flea markets in West
brought to Ohio on temporary cus- Virginia.

.

OKLAHOMA ClTY (AP) Gov. David Walt~rs . said his 20year'old son who died.of a drug .
overdose "~ no\v in an inaedible
place of collstantjov and happiness
11111 abundantlove.'1
Funerat services were planned
for Satlll'daJ for Shaun David Wal-

he said. "So
far, we've got no motive, no indication whatsoever of a reason.''
He said a number of bullets were flfed atlhe house from a pass-

~~
.
uSize
'
Elgin said wiblesses described the vehicle as a m1d-to-sma

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Point Pleasant, WV

..~

..---....;._,_.,.'-· -----Local briefs·:.....-~-----, RAC .files another
.
·e~·at
.bdu· c'ted, assaulte-d.
Wioman a

December 29, 1991

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oecember 29, 1991

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

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December 29, 198~~

. Meigs County
·~ in '91: Taking
fstock of a year
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By JULIE E. DILLON
Times-8.entinel Staff
.
POMEROY - Can you believe it will soon be 1992? What did
1991 mean to you? What do you feel were the highlights as well as the
disappointments?
The year came in like a lion with a flood which forced many businesses m Pomeroy to evacuate their establishments on New Year's
Eve. It appears this New Year's Eve will be much less stressful with' ·
out the threat of1another flood.
So, take some time to think about what you've done ·and what the
new year holdS in stpre. Make the most of it and 1ry to be the best you
can be.
No one knows what the new year has in store but one thing is for
certain - it will only be as good as you make it. So, make it lhe best
you can.
·
Pictured are just a few of the highlights of 1991. Do you remember

•: when ...

••

: r-s photos byJulie E. Dillon,

-:charlene Hoeflich, Brian J. Reed

'
NEW YEAR'S DAY,
1991- There was water, water everywhere on New Year's Day when this picture or Pomeroy was taken
from Mason, W.Va. Many Main Street merchants were forced to
move .their merchandise to higher ground as the flooding Ohio

•• 1·

made its way in their rront d~s on New Year's Eve. The crest or
49,4 feet came at 3:42 a.m. on Jan. 2 - 3.4 feet above the flood
level ot 46 feet.

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FLOUR
S LB. BAG

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1eners••••·•••••••••

DUN~N

INTERSECTION COMPLETED -The new
intersection or U.S. 33 ~~ N'ye Avenue and State
Route 124 in Pomeroy
completed in August,

HINES

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making for a much quicker and easier traffic •'
flow that was greatly enjoyed by motorists.
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MIXES

$139

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Lettuce•••••••• IIAD.

$1
2

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2~ Mllk••••••••••
Saltines••••••••••
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Cat Food••••••••6oz..

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$ 29

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Limit I ,. ClltOIIIf

oz.

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BANQUET

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3 $5 ·
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TONY'S FROZEN

Pizza•••••••••••••
C(lJP(fi ~ · :::
MUELLER'S

$599

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OlfwGod Dtc.l9 tl!ru Ja11. 4, 1991

Umlt I Per (ustollll'

NOODLES

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3/$1

GoH Only At Powtl's Sup« Volu
Off• Goo4 Dtc. 29 •• JaL 4, 1991
Uooltl P.r C.sto••

PAIL ·

held there since 1979. Here, Terry Smith, an
employee at the project, conducts a portion of
the tour aboard the facility's repair boat.

24 OZ. CAN

GROUND
BEEF

SURF DETERGENT
136

STEW

GALLON

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$1590,

~ightning
ByJERRYSCHVVARTZ
Associated Press Writer
The enonnous 'bang that began
- the rout of Saddam HusIraq by a U.S.-led internsforce - was the year's top
story. according to an AssoCI·
Press poll of news editors and
llroadcast news directors.
:: And the whimper that ended
1991 - the swift collapse of the
c!mpire of cards that was the Union
Soviet Socialist Republics -.$s runner-up.
: The Senate confmnation of U.S.
Supreme Court Justice Clarence
ftK&gt;mas was third, followed by the
l)llease of American hostages in
Ubanon, the recession and the end
· &amp;[the Cold War, according to the
(~3 news executives who voted.
•. The rest, in order, were AIDS.
the arrest of an unemployed Mil~ukee factory worker in the mutilpiion deaths of 17 young men, the
Middle East peace talks, and the
v(deo- taped beatin~ of a motorist
~y Los Angeles police.
~ What was 1991's front page?
Five domestic stories, five international stories; one lightning war,
lil'o peace initiatives; freedom for
$~)viet republics and for the prisonem of Islamic extremist.!!; gore and
dimly lit mayhem and sexual
llarassment; a relentless disease and
sputtering economy..
. From the top: ·

or

•

. '

••

ROCK SLIDE - A rock slide that occurred
just below Hobson on State Route 7 near the
Meigs-Gallia County border during the month
of May caused the evacuation or 26 people in 10
households. It is speculated that the slide

occurred as a result or an earthquake in IUiiiOis. .
In addition to the rock slides that dumped tons •
of boulders from nearby cliffs, countless cracks
in the ground and on the road developed.

war, empire's fall top events

I. The buildup that followed
Saddam's.invasion of Kuwait was
the top story of 1990; the subsequent Mother of All Battles was the
headline story of 1991.
On Jan. 17, a day after the United Nations deadline for Iraq's with·
drawal from Kuwait, the United
States and its allies unleashed more
than five weeks of thundering air
strikes. On Feb. 24, the ground war
began.
Fears that U.S. forces would be
trapped in the desen sands, choked
by poison gas, were never realized.
Instead, America's superior troops
and firepower unleashed a punish- ·
ing offensive that ended Feb. 27
with Saddam's anny in tauers. The
toll: 148 American lives, upwards
of 100,000 Iraqis.
There were yellow-ribbon-festooned victory parades for the
returning heroes, but there was
unease. Nearly a quaner of American combat deaths were caused by
friendly fare. Saddam remained in
power, Kurdish refugees in terror,
and the full extent of Iran's remaining nuclear capability in doub~
2: On Jan. I, 1991, the Soviet
Union was a troubled colossus,
beset by economic and ethnic problems but still a superpower. On Jan.
I, 1992, the Sovtet Union wiU not
exist.
In the blin~ of a historic eye, the
74-year Sovaet experiment was

swept away by the gang :that
couldn't putsch straight - a conspiracy of hardlin ers who took
Mikhail Gorbachev prisoner Aug.
19 while he was on vacation in the
Crimea.
They failed to take into consideration Boris Yeltsin, who rallied
the Russian people. When the coup
failed, and Gorbachev returned to
Moscow on Aug. 21 , everything
had changed - Yeltsin, not Gorbachev, was !)le central power.
Gorbachev resigned as head of
the Communist Party three days
later and urged that it be disbanded,
but nothing could stem the tide.
First the Baltic states became independent, and then the remaining 12
republics. Eleven of them joined in
a Commonwealth of Independent
States; Russia and Ycltsin were in
the lead - Gorbachev was discarded.
3. Clarence Thomas' nomination to replace Thurgood Marshall
on the Supreme Court was seen as
a political masterstroke - it would
be hard for the Democratic
Congress to reject a black nominee,
no matter how conservative.
And Thomas was indeed on the
brink of confirmation when Anita
Hill, a Unive!liity of Olclahoma law
professor, came forward to .accuse
him of sexual hruassment a decade
ago, when she worked for Thomas.
The hearings into Hill's allega-

lions turned the nation into a megadisc ussion group, riveted by discussions of sex and power, right
and wrong.
Whom to beli eve? Thomas.
according to the poll s. And the
Senate sent him to the bench by a
vote of 52 .to 48.
4. For 2,455 days, Terry Anderson was held prisoner in Lebanon.
never knowing when or whether
hi§ captors would release him. But
then, the end of two conflicts the Cold War and the Gulf War turned th e Middle East upside
down, and everyone wanted to be
on good terms with the Un.ited
States.
Jesse Turner . The Anglican
envoy, Terry Waite. Thomas
Sutherland. I oseph Cicippio. Aiann
Steen. One by one, the lddnappers
released their captives.
On Dec. 4, Anderson -'- chief
Middle East correspondent for The
Associated Press - enjoyed sun'
light.
"It's been so long," he said.
The nighunare ended on Dec. 27
when the remains of the last American captive, CIA station chief
William Buckley, were released.
5. There were no silver linings
to the economic clouds that hovered over 1991 - they had long
since been converted to currency to
b_ail out savings and loans , or to
fmance leveraged buy.outs in the

go-go 1980s.
In November, unemployment
stood at 6.8 percent, not counting
lhe thousands who had dropped out
of the job market from discourage·
ment. IBM, General Motors and
other industrial titans announced
heretofore unimaginable layoffs.
The deficit was pegged at nearl y
$400 billion. The Federal Reserve
dropped its discount rare to levels
not seen since 1964.
Economists debated whether the
recession still raged, pundits debated whether it was actually a depression, politicians just debated - and
Bush, accused of doing nothing,
watched as his popularity plummeted.
6. On March 31, the Warsaw
Pact - the fonner Soviet bloc dissolved its military arm. On July
31, Bush and Gorbachev signed a
pact reducing long-range nuclear
weapons. On Sep~ 27, Bush unilaterally eliminated other nuclear
weapons; eight days later, Gorbachev announced his own cutbacks. By year's end, Russia wanted to join NATO.
If you are 45 years old or
younger, 1991 held the fi rst
moments you've ever experienced
without a Cold War.
7. The AIDS epidemic turned 10
this year; nearly 200,000 Ameri- ·
cans suffered from the disease, and
(Contio~ on 8·2)

�.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

Page-82-Sunday Times-Sentinel

wv

Board hearS
0' 'AL actt'vt' ty

MARLA

CLENDENIN, WAYNE DIDDLE

Clendenin-Diddle
GALLIPOLIS - Marion and
Pamela Clendenin. Ashland, Ky.,
formerly of Point Pleasant,
announce the upcoming marriage
of their daughter. Marla Lynn , to
Wayne Diddle, son of Ralph and
Vickie Diddle. Addison.
An open church wedding will be
observed at the First Presbyterian
Church in Gallipolis on Saturday.
Jan. 4 at 6:30p.m. A redption will

follow at the Gallipolis Elks Lodge:
The bride-to-be is a 1988 graduate of Point Pleasant High School
and a 1990 graduate of the Holzer
College of Nursing at the University of Rio Grande. The bridegroom
is a 1986 graduate of North Gallia
High School.
The couple will reside in Broadview Heights, Ohio.

Gardner-Dillman
MIDDLEPORT - Marvin K.
and Berdena M. Gardner, Middleport are announcing the engagement of their daughter. Tammy M.
Gardner, Marysville, Mich ., to
Thomas Ray Dillman, al so of
Marysville, Mich.
Miss Gardner is a 1986 graduate

.

of Meigs High S•hool. She IS
employed as a cerufied ~etghmas- .
ter with Denton Construction.
Dillman is a 1979 graduate of
North Posey High School in lndiana. He IS employed ~ a foreman
with Denton Construcuon.
Wedding plans are incomplete.

Lightning war...
piece of videotape oil WI.
It was Holliday, an amateur
photographer, who videotaped a
group of Los Angeles police officer
assaulting Rodney King, 25. They
said he bad led them on a 100-mph
chase and had attacked them;
. he
denied it, and the tape - shown
again and again and again nationwide - seemed to back htm up.
Ultimately, four officers were
indicted in the attack on King. And
Daryl Gates, the Los Angeles chief
of police, said he would step down
in 1992.

(Continued from B-1)
8 million people were infected
worldwide.
But two victims put the disease
on the front page: basketball star
Magic Johnson, who retired when
he learned he was infected, and
Kimberly Bergalis, who died at age
23 after contracting the di sease
from her dentist.
Her illness galvanized many to
call for mandatory AIDS testing of
health professional s; his illness
convinced others than no one was
safe.
8 It took a while to count up the
carn~ge in Jeffrey Dahmer's Milwaukee apartment. There were ll
bodies but they had been chopped
up. There were four heads in the
refrigerator and freezer plus seven
acid-washed skulls.
In all, Dahmer admitted killing
17 males over 13 years. He told
police he had s e~ with four
corpses. and he saved the heart of
one "to eat later."
9. After four major wars over 43
years, Israel and the Arabs bent to
u.s. pressure. They sa,t down to
settle maucrs. They dido t.
.
The first round of talks, 10
Madrid. was notabl.e because of the
inclusion of Palestlmans. When the
second round, in Washingt?n,
broke up. no one asserted anythmg
had been accomplished. Talks were
to resume there on J.an. 7.
.
10. George Holliday was nom_t·
nated for no Em my, but . he. IS
responsible for the _m~~~ gnppmg

.

In the service
CHESHIRE - Jason M.
Yeauger, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Barry Yeauger of Cheshire, enlisted in the Air Force's Delayed
Enlistment Program, according to
TSgt. Randy Frisby. Air Force
recruiter in Athens.
Yeauger, a 1991 graduate of
Meigs High School, is scheduled
fo r enlistment in the regular Air
Force in February 1992. Upon
graduation from the Air Force's
six-week basic training course near
San Antonio , Texas, Yeauger is
sc heduled to receive technical
training in the heating systems
career field.
Yeauger will be earning credits
toward an associate degree in
applied sciences through the Community College of the Air Force
while attending basic and technical
training schools.

SANTA'S WINGS SUCCESSFUL- For the third consecutive
Christmas, Gallipolis C!tapter C-1 or the Gold Wing Road Riders
1\.ssociation distributed toys to needy area children and senior citi~ns in Gallia County. This year, new and old toys were delivered
to 285 children. Thirty-four senior citizens received gifts of clothi~g, food and household items. Area representative Larry DeWitt
.

R.0BERT M H0LLEy 1 M• o· •

-===============:=::::~=:~11
t

.

FAMILY PRACTICE

'

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PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

~mergency
-HEAP
.

expressed the group's appreciation to area businesses, organizations and individuals who donated items to this year's "Santa's
Wings" program. The 116·member chapter collecled, wrapped
and delivered the toys and gifts. At left, DeWitt is seen with assls. hint area representati~e Hugh Francis with some or the gifts, while
members or the chapter are seen at right du,rin1 the "Santa's
Wings" Toy Buying Day at Hills.

application period underway

·GALLIPOLIS- Emergency
HEAP for the 1991-92 application
period is into its second month and
goes on until April 3, 1992. The
federally -funded program offers
heating assistance once on an
emergency basis for eligible households whose heat-related utilities
are disconnected, threatened with
disconnection or bulk fuel supply is
less than 10 days.
· The regular HEAP program also
offers heating assistance once per
heating season to low-income
households while defraying the

high cost of home heating. The decreased income during these
application deadline for regular periods to qnalify later in the pro·
HEAP is Jan. 31, 1992, leaving 30 gram.
.
days to apply.
Examples of these type situa·
The income guidelines for both · tions could ocur from layoff, strike,
programs is the same. Howe.yer... retirement, disability or death of a
regular. HEAP requires the previous spouse or household member.
12 months' income while the past
Applications for both programs
three months' income is acceptable can be made at the Gallia-Meigs
on emergency HEAP. The 12- Community Action Agency
month period or three-month peri- Cheshire office Monday through
od for the income test is deter- Thursday, 9:30 a.m.-noon and !mined from the date of application, 3:30 p.m. The Gallia County Outmaking it possible for some with reach Office. 220 Jackson Pike,
· Gallipolis. and the Meigs County
""":::-"--~---------------~ Outreach Office, 39350 Union
Ave .. Pomeroy, acceptapplications

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)
25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT, WV.

(304) 675-1675

Meigs County Calendar

INVENTORY SALE!

'Community Calendar Items Mountaineers will perform Tuesappear two thlys before an event day at Skateland in Ripley.
and the day of that event. Items
mrlst be received well in advance
SYRACUSE - The Sulton
to pssure publication in the calen- Township Trustees will meet Tuesdar.
. day at 1 p.m. in the Syracu se
Municipal Building. An organiza.
SUNDAY
tional meeting will be held
CHESTER - The lzaak Walton Wednesday at 10 a.m.
Club will have a muzzle loader
shoot on Sunday at I p.m. at the
RUTLAND - The Rutland
club near Chester. Open sights Nazarene Church 'will have a New
only. Prizes include turkey, bacon Year's Eve service' on Tuesday at 8
aruJ cash.
p.m. with special services at 11:45
p.m.
.\
.
POMEROY - · There will be a
12-:step AA meeting on Sunday at 7
POMEROY - The Belles and
p.m. at the JTPA office, 117 W. Beaus Square Dance Club will
Serond St. in Pomeroy.
have a dance New Year's Eve from
9 p.m. to 1 a.m. at the Meigs CounMONDAY
ty Senior Citizens Center for all
DARWIN - The Bedford western square dancers and former
Township Trustees will hold their square dancers. Dress in informaL
end-of-year meeting on Monday at
MIDDLEPORT- There will
7 P.m. at the town haD.
be a New Year's Eve dance at the
-LETART- The Letart Town- American Legion Feeney Bennett
ship Trustees will meet Monday at Post No. 128 at the annex on Mill
I0:30a.m. at the office building for Street in Middleport from 8 p.m. to
thelr end-of-year meeting.
1 a.m. Music will be by "CJ. and
Company." Refreshments avail - ·
I&gt;AGEVILLE- The Board of able . Members may attend at no
Tr~stees of-Columbia Towns.hip
charge. There will be a minimum
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the fee for guests.
fini station. End-of-year business
wiU be completed and an organizaPORTLAND - The Lebanon
tional meeting for 1992 will be Township Trustees will meet Tueshel~.
day at 4 p.m. An organizational
meeting will follow.
•
TUESDAY
CHESTER - The Chester
RACINE - The Racine AmeriTo~nship Trustees will have their
can Legion Post 602 will have a
year-end meeting on Tuesday atiO New Year's Eve party on Tuesday
a:ni. at the town hall. An organiza- from 8 p.m. to midnight at the post
tional meeting will be held Thurs- home. Cost is $5 per person.

2 DAYS ONLY!

Oris and Mae
Hubbard', 50th
Wedding Anniversary
will be on
January 3, 1992.
They will celebrate their
anniversary with an open
house for all their family
and friends on Saturday,
January 4, 1991 between the
hours of 1:00 p.m.-4 p.m. at
the recreation center at
Royal Oak Resorts, located
at 33429 Flatwoods Road,
Racine, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Hubbard are lifelong residents of Syracuse,
Ohio and raised 5 children there. They also have 13
grandchildren and 18 great-grandchildren. Please come
and help us celebrate this joyous occasion. Gifts are not
expected.

dax.

-

LONG BOTTOM -There will
be a New Year's Eve service at the
M_ount Olive Community Church
in1Long Bottom on Tuesday. Pastor
Lawrence Bush invites the public:

HOLZER CLINIC
WELCOMES THE 1991
ADDITIONS
TO ITS MEDICAL STAFF

·:____::.

..

;PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
Tqwnship Trustees will meet Tuesda}' at 10 a.m. to conduct year-end
b~ines s. An organizational meetink. will be held Thursday.

----\'

,HOBSON - The Hobson
of Christ in Christian
Union will hold "watch night" servio!es on Tuesday. Theron Durham
will be the pastor.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Hillside Baptist
Church will have regular church
services on Wednesday at 7 p.m.
There will be special singing by
groups of the church. Rev . James
Acree invites the public.
SYRACUSE - An organizational meeting will be held
Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the Syracuse Municipal building for the
Sutton Township Trustees.

GALLIPOLIS - Activities at
the Gallia County Senior 'Citizens
Center for Dec. 30 through Jan. 3
are as follows:
Monday - Walking Club. 10
a.m.; S.hort Subjects, 11 a.m.; Cho·
rus. I p.m.; Pool, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.
Tuesday - STOP, 10:30 a.m.;
Quilting, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.
Wedn esday - Closed, New
Year's Day.
Thursday - Bible Study, 10:45
a.m.; Blood Pressure-volunteer, 10
a.m.-noon; Pool,!Oa.m.-3p.m.
Friday - Walking Club, 10
a.m. ; Art and Craft Classes, 10
a.m.-noon and 1-3 p.m.
Menus for the week are as fol lows:
Monday - Pepper steak with
rice, green beans, bread , chocolate
pudding.
.
Tuesday - Ham, potatoes,
cooked cabbage/carrots, cornbread,
cake with strawberry orchi:rry top·
ping.
·
Wednesday - Closed for the
holiday.
Thursday - Baked steak with
grav y, buttered noodles, broccoli,

:RUTLAND - There will be a
Ne\v Year's Eve dance at the RutIaiid American Legion Hall on
Tuesday from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m.
Tttose attending bring a cove~.ed
dish . There will be $5 donauon
tali.en at the door. Music will be
pr&amp;vided by the Country Kin Band.
R ~ Fitch will be the caller. Public
inf ited.

OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
GAUIPOLIS

.

· 414 SecoRd.Ave., 2nd .Fioor
.,
.
446.0166 '
992-5912
8:30 to 5:00 Mo•day·friday
1:30 to 5:00 Moaday·Fridaf · 8:30 to 12 Satlrday
Closed n1rsday:
.
CloSed ntrsday
AlSO: .llcbal, Chesaptokt, Alhens, Qlllcatflt, loga &amp;MWthur

Judy F. Burroughs, M.D.
Pathology

Donald A. Fisco, D.O.
' Family Practice

These ekilled physicians join the Holzer Clinic five decade
philosophy pl'QvidiDg high quality health care in a
courteous and sympathelic manner.
Our Medical Staff is now 65 physicians strong- 22
separat,e medical speciallies in one organization. Six
locations pl'Qviding medical care for you and your family and ·we're STill' growing!

of

David B. Price, D.O.
Radiology

•RUTLAND

.'

HOLZER,
CLINIC
.
385 JACKSON PIKE
446-5411

- The Rutland

F~will Baptist Church will have

...

'

.,

wA'tch services on Tuesday from 7
p.jjl. to midnight. There will be .
se•eral speakers. Rev. Paul Taylor
in~ites the public.
r
.,.[:LOITRIDGE ..,. The Lottn'dge
C&lt;jplmunity Center will host a New
Year's Eve party on Tuesday from
8 im. to midnight. Refreshments
wij;J be available. Public invited.
--"

R IPLEY,W.Va. - The Libeny
•

'

bread, peaches.
Friday - Vegetable soup,
pimento cheese. cole slaw, bread
and pears.
Please make reservations by
calling 446-7000 before 9 a.m. on
the day you wish to attend:

l•

Latest ia Bridal Fashions I
Mike YourSalecfl•lwly 1
l . .,vftoflm •MOI•IrlciiSIIIald • ~
l
• Pr.., • Pllrly Drtuts

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R al A • ..J.o $45

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rand Aflairs

30880 lrlar Ridge Rd. t
•
langsville, OH 45741 f
:
614·742·1002
t•'w·:u:u::c..~c:J:'"x""'u.:"-w:J:•:u:w:ij
~

RIO GRANDE - The Univusity of Rio Grande will be offering
a two-evening and an aU-day work-shop in Using Computers-lntennediate/Advanced MS-DOS Operating Systems.
Two different course times are
being offered. Evening courses will
meet from 6-9:30 p.m. on Tuesday,
Jan. 7 and Thursday, Jan. 9. An all~Y course will meet from 9 a.m.4:30p.m. on Wectnesday, Jan. 8. .
Classes meet on the University
of Rio Grande Cl!lllpus in the ·College of Business Computer Lab,
Room 108. Cost fo r the class is
$60. The pre-registration deadline
is Monday. Jan. 6, for both the
evening and ali-day class sessions.
Computer users can make more ·
· use of their systems·by understanding the basics of the operating system which runs their application
· programs. Knowing the Disk Operating System commands and functions allow the user to be.more in
control and more productive. This
courSe will make you a more organized and efficient computer user.
Topics include function keys,
creating and organizing dircctori~s
and subdirectories, formauing
disks, installing, copying, erasing,
renaming and backing up file s,
checking for di sk contents and.
errors, recovering lost files, creating batch files, and understanding
input and output.
This course is suitable for all
IBM or compatible users. DOS
practice disks and take-home worksheets are provided. Instructing the

course wili be Robert 'Bence. Participants will receive a continuing
education certificate for .6 CEUs.
Further information on the
workshops and registration information may be obtained fr9m the
Office of Contin.uing Education,
Umverstty of Rto Grande, Box
878, Rio Grande, Ohio 45674, or
by calling 245-5353, extension
325. The toll-free number in Ohio
is 1-800-282-7201.

OUR SHEPHERD SAVIOR
The Word was made flesh
Dwelling In earthen dust.
Born In Dtde Bethlehem
The Savior, Wham we trust.
Only Begotien of the Father
UniQue was He In ~lrlh.
Spirit and virgin bor• ·
N'o ather like on earth•
They ~eheld His glory ·
It sliane bright an arOund.
Heaven ancfearth bare wll111ss
He was the Christ come down.
FuU of grace and truth
Without measure was He.
A~le to be our Savior
· He conquered at Calvary

.

Sin's penalty now removed
Rt~urredlon was soon won.
Then, de1cended back Ia heaven
'TIU the sheep count is do111
C Rnb•rt L. llnrp11r 1112419)

&gt;

New Year's Eve Spedal
TUESDAY, DEC. 31
3:00 P.M. 'nl Closing
SEAFOOD BUFFET..AII·U·Can·Eat
l1dudes Iced Tea or CoHee

$849
OPEN NEW YEAR'S DAY
7:00 A.m. to 4:00 P.M.

MOM'S
SMORGASBORD
The Corner at The Light
RAVENSWOOD, WY.
(304).273·9038

CUSTOMER NOTICE

'Four Star Inti. Trading
Co., the distributor of
Model #32337 Electric
Brass Candle Lamps,
has advised Ames of a
possible electrical de·
feet in a small number
of the lamps. If you
purchased any of
these lamps after
October 1, 1991,
please return them to
Ames for a full refund.
CancUe Lamps purchased prior to Octo·
ber 1, 1991 are not
involved.
We Apologize For Any
Inconvenience.

AMES
DEPT. STORES

ANYONE CAN SELL YOU
PROPANE!
Ferrellgas provides you with a long-term
commitment to safety and quality service.
Ferrellgas gives you a lot more than just what we put in
your tank. You get propane PLUS ...

SAFETY...we have one of the most experienced propane
delivery teams in the business. We give you more for your
money when il comes to safety and dependability.

SPECIAL SERVICES... Because we value you as a
customer, we want to give you·beUer service while we help
· you control costs. ASK ABOUT OUR SPECIAL
CUS.TOMEA PROGRAMS. Including our Level Payment
Plan and the Ferrellgas Installation Review.

1 Big DayTuesday, Dec. 31st
'

DUE~ TO BAD TIMES WE

MUST LIQUIDATE ALL
FLOOR SAMPLES AND
MODELS BEFORE 1992.
DON'T MISS THIS
BIGGEST SALE OF THE
YEAR.

...,'•

CASH AND CARRY

.

446-2264

-

Ferrellgos

'\

I

Stalt Route 35

Galllpolls 1 OH 45631

'•
~

Ferre IIgas

-Call us at

•

•'
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ELLIOTT'S

-

C~urch

IRACINE - The Racine Baptist
Church will have' watch night servii es on Tuesday from 9 p.m. to
midnight. The public is invited to

Monday through Frfday 9 a.m.noon and 1-3:30 p.m. No applications are taken at the Cheshire
office on Fridays.
Additional information regarding these programs may be
obtained by calling the Cheshire
CAA office at 367-7341 or 9926629, the Gallia County Outreach
Office at 446-0611 or the Meigs
County Outreach Office at 9925605. The taU-free number for regular HEAP inquiries is 1-800-2820880, or for the hearing-impaired
with a telecommunication device
for the deaf (TDD) at 1 800 686
1557.

Gallia Senior Citizens Calendar

I

Diane L. Atkins, M.D.
· ·
Pediatrics

Sunday Tl.mes-Sentl

M&amp;DOS workshop-planned

sary through staffings. The Bureau that no greater honor .ca~ lle
of Vocational Rehabilitation and , bestowed tha~ the r~~ogmtton
the Bureau of Services for the afforde«t by ones peers. ·
Visually Impaired assist with the
This is the second year Ms.
additional monies 10 support Wood .and Ms. Short have b7en
employment. Another aspect of recogmzed by the J.M. Fo_undauon.
PACE and its existence is the Last year they were a fmahst .at ·
South Eastern Ohio .supported Metgs County Board MR/DD wuh
Employment Consortmm , whtch 156 apphc~nts, compeung wtth
addresses supported employment oth: r fmaltsts fwm S~n Dte~o.
problems· from Gallia, Jackson, Cahf., an.d Lansmg, Mtch&gt;(ftrst
Vinton and Metgs counues and pla~erecetved$20,000).
serves as an advisory counctl.
Even thoug~ PACE may n?t. be
A leuer received by CARF a .money wmner, the recogmuon . .
(Commission on Accreditation of wtU o~n dll!/rs to other grants a~d.,:
Rehabilitation Facilities) states, r,oundauons, the spokesman S31d. •.•
"This is unquestionably the level of Never before has any agency been • :
prestigious acclaim within our selected more than once. nor has .
industry to be comparable to the any aNency from Ohto ever .
Nobel Prize we strongly believe . placed.
•
·
·

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wv

OH-Polnt

naf11edfinalist

J

. PLANNED PARENTHOOD

•

..

att~nd .

s~ ;....:-No ontrtful strvkes HcaUSI of lnaUity to pay.

POMEROY
236.1. Maltt St ·2ad Floor

"·

Pomeroy-Midd

family Planning
It Makes Sense•••
Confidential Services;
Birth Control
V.D. Screening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing

..

December 29, 1991 -:.

Employment~p~ciality . u:_~yit
.
·
- · · persons part-time three require
RIO GRAN_DE -The _spectal su ort and an additional II r·
proJect, Provtding Altemauves for · PP
. . . skiD
pe
Communi~ Employme~t (PAC~) ~~b!: :'~gent 8 necessary
of the _Galfia-Jackson-V.m~n Jomt
Providin/Al~ti~es for ComVoc.attonal S~b~ol Dts~tct bas munity Employment works closely
recetved word tiJS a finalJStof ,the with social service agencies,
~earch for E~cellence Award 91 MR/DD boards and mental health
m Employabttity Develop~ent . to liSSist person with disabilities for
There w~re 258 apphcattons job placement, work adjustment,
f~m .the Untted States. The other job coaching, realistic supported
ftnahsts we~e from Clear.water, employment opportunities, vocaFla., and Mmnea~ohs, Mmn. In tiona! evaluation, job development
o~er to apply to e Search Com- and individual training schedules
mtttee of the J.M. Foundation, the and other services deemed necesemployment department must ha~e
a 36-48 month backgro~nd .m
em~loyment of persons w1th diS- '
abtltttes. .
. Alternative Employment CoorV,
dmator Cathenne A. Wood, and
Work Adjustment Specialist Martie
WELLSTON - During the
Short, have exemplified the recent meeting of the Ohio Valley
employment of persons with dis- Area Libraries (OVAL), director
abilities through their employment Eric S. Anderson reported that 30
at the Meigs County Board of trustees, member library staff and
MR/DD since 1987. Due to a levy OVAL staff attended the OVAL
failure, the department closed and Holiday Gathering on Dec. 14.
was reinstated at Gallia-J acksonIt was the largest turnout ever
Vinton Joint Vocational School for the event, and Anderson conthrough a grant from Gallia-Jack- veyed thanks from the staff for supson-Meigs Board of Alcohol Drug porting the function.
Addiction Mental Health Services
The board approved the .hiring
and the Ohio Department of Mental of Kelly Landrum, of rural Jack- ·
Health.
son, as the Bibliographic Services
The J.M. Foundation was creat- Clerk III. The board also accepted
ed in 1924 by Jeremiah Milbank to· the annual Member Salaries and
enhance the nation's health, reba- Benefits Survey.
bilitation, and educational services.
Also approved was a new Books
Currently, the Foundation awards By Mail contract for the Lane
approximately $2.5 million each Library in Hamilton, and the
year to human service organiza- renewal of the service for the
tions which demonstrate excellence Wadsworth Public Library. This
in cost effectiveness and measur- brings the total number of Books
able benefits to people served.
By Mail contracts for non-OVAL
The program is guided by repre- members to three.
sentati ves of 14 of the nation's
The board also approved minor
leading major private and govern- remodeling work on the facility.
mental organizations serving per- Four new electrical circuits will be
sons with disabling conditions. added, reflecting the increased use
Applicants are reviewed and of computers. In addition, three
screened by a private independent extra extensions will be added to
professional evaluation firm and the phone system.
final selections are made by a blueEstablished in 1973 as the fust
ribbon panel ofleaders in the field. state-funded regional public Iibrary
On Dec. 9, Pon'ney Cisco, Adult · system tn OhiO, OVAL admmtsters
Services Director, Ms. Wood and through local public libraries a
Ms. Short traveled to Washington variety of programs desi~ned to
D.C. to attend a reception and an tmprove and extend servtces to
awards banquet. Awards were pre- local residents . OVAL is made up
scnted by J.M. Milbank and Sen. ofpubhc hbranes m Athens, HockRobert Dole, alan~ with various ing. Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs,
national dignitanes. While in Pickaway, Pike, Ross, Scioto and
Washington, they visited Congress Vinton counties. ·
and Senate representatives from
The OVA!- Board of Trustees,
Ohio and other areas.
whtch conststs of one member
"It is an honor to be a finalist, from each public library board,
especially with the employment determines policy, co~t~ols
rate being so high and the employa- fmances, an~ makes fi~al dectstons
bility of persons with disabilities on what semces wtll be offered.
being so new " a district
Wanda Eblin serves on the
spokesman said. Atotal on5 per- OVAL board and . rep_resents the
sons are employed full-time, nine Metgs County Publtc Ltbrary.

.

Beside Riverfront Honda-431 Pike Street

Kanauga, Oh.

'I
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Page-84-Sunday Tll!les~Senttnel

Pomeroy-Middleport:-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

.

December 9, 1991

. D~tcembar 29, 19$; •

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Page-84-Sunday Times-sentinel

December ' 9, 1~91

. December 29,1

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Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-85

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Page-86-Sunday·Times-Sentinel

It's tough fqr working
men to dress in comfort

GALLIPOLI'S - Seven~ by Jimmy Allen of Southeastern
members and g~ests atten
the Equtpment Co., and by Charles
Dec. 20 meeung of th~ _Ohto Small of Sh~lly Co. New clerks
Trustees and Clerks Assoclllllon at and trustees mtrodueed themselves
the Gallia County Senioi Citizens and were welcomed.
Center.
Dignitaries present included
The meeting was called to order Munici~al Judge Joseph Oain,
by the pres1dent, Jeff Fowler, who Prosecu~ Auome~ Brent Saunwelcom~d allatte~ding. Minutes of der~, attorney Do~glas Co:-vtes,
the p~ev1ous meetmg and the~- Engmee~ James Baud, Mumc1pal
surer s report were read b~ PhylliS Court bl;llliffGarold Provens, EngiPope and thanks was gaven by neer Phil Roberts, Treasurer Larry
Steve Kiser.
Betz and Commissioners George
Dinner was served, sponsored Pope, Kail Burleson and Harold

ANNLANDBBS

Unfortunalely, six months larer she
was dead and there has been no one
to lake her place.
Women claim that men have it
easy when it comes to apparel.
Men need buy only a couple of suits
and they're set. Could be. Still,
when the t.emperauune is 102, I'd
love to be able 10 wear a flimsy
couon something-{)C-other. For that
particular freedom, I'd ttade places
with a woman in a minute. Let the
suits and ties go the way of the
girdle, I say. ·• STIJCK AT THE
CLEANERS
DEAR STIJCK: Confide in your
haberdasher or a trusted salesman.
He can help you. Your shins are
probably too tight and too high on
your neck.
I trust you know that jackets can
be purchased in cotton, seersucker,
hnen and many other fabrics. Investigate the alternatives: No matter
how you cut iL buster, men have far
fewer apparel woes than women.
You came to the wrong place to
complain.
Dear Ann Landers: My f181lce
and I invited his mother, his two
sisters and his brother-in-law for
diMer last weekend. We also invited
my parents and my brother. His
mother showed up with five other
people from out of town •• her
sister, brother, mother, sister-in-law
and brother-in-law.

1111, 1AI-Aqele1
'l'lmeiSy.,._
Creaton ,8)'111111lUe.''

I feel what she did was tolally
wrong alld I am very upset. My
future. mother-in-law says, "We're
all family." and she was surprised
thai I didn\ gJCCt all these people
with open arms.
She feels that family should be
welcome any time, whether invited
or not. I told her I wasn\ brought up
like that and she said, "You are
RIO GRANDE - Two classes
wrong. Kin comes before etiquette." Lotus 1-2-3-lntermediate SpreadI would like to know who is right sheet Applications are being
Please referee this one. - ANGRY offered by the University of Rio
IN N.C.
Grande Office of Continuing EduDEAR N.C.: Your future mother- cation.
in-law had no business showing up · Evenmg class sessions wilt' meet
with five unexpected dinner guests.
I see real trouble ahead unless you
have a frank. talk with her and let
her know what you will and will not
MIDDLEPORT - Jamey A.
tolerate. Good luck, honey. She
Little,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Steven
sounds like a handful.
Little
of
Middleport, enlisted in the
Ann Landers" latest booklet,
Air
Force's
Delayed Enlistment
"Nuggets and Doozies," has
everything from the outrageously Program, aCcording 10 TSgt. Randy
funny to the poignantly insightful. Fn sby, Air Force recruiter in
Send a self-addressed, long, busi· Athens.
Little, a 1991 graduate of Meigs
~ress-size envelope and a check or
Hi~h School, is scheduled for
money order for $5 (this includes enhsanent in the regular Air Force
postage and handling) to: Nuggets, in April 1992. Upon graduation
c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box ll562. from the Air Force's six-week
Chicago, fll. 6061J -0562. (In basic training course near San
CanadD, send $6.)
Antonio, Texas, Liule is scheduled
to receive technical training in the
general career field.
Little will be earning credits
an associate degree in
toward
a form letter," Ray said.
applied
sciences
through the ComSeveral days after mailing the
munity
College
of the Air Force
mug, Corbett called Ra y at the
museum . The actor asked the while al!ending basic and technical
show 's producers if he could use training schools.
the mug on the show and they
CHESTER Shawn C.
agreed, though it hasn't been on
Marcinko,
son
of
Mr
. and Mrs.
yet.
Corbett sent the museum workers gifts of his own - coffee mugs
from Roslyn 's Cafe, a gathering
place on the show, and a promotional mug for the popular series.

"

.

Federal Interior Minister Rudolf
Seiters sent her a tele~m prrusing
her " fascinating actmg ability ."
Radio stations played her recordmgs and three of her films were
shown on televiSIOn, along with a
documen1ary on her life.
MUSKEGON , Mich. (AP) Jo hn Corbett has a mug from
Michigan for his coffee when disc
JOCkey Chns takes to the airwaves
on CBS -TV' s "Northern Exposure.''

Paula Ray, a secretary at the
Muskegon Museum of An. nouced
Chris " was always drinking a cup
of coffee.''
Ray and fellow museum worker
Melissa Freye sent a museum •mug
to Corbett m Roslyn, Wash., the
town that doubles as tiny Cicely,
Alaska, on the show.
"If anything,! thought we'd get

I

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I

LONDON (AP) - Margaret
Thatcher headed for Miami with
her husband Friday for a New
Year's vacation.
The former prime minister and
hubby Denis, who carried two
bulging shopping bags from the
duty free shop, smiled but made no ·
comment as they left on an American Airlines flight.
The couple is joining their son,
Mark, who lives in Dallas, and his
wife and son in Aorida.

KING DANIEL BUCKLEY

.

William Thoma of Chester, enhst·
ed in the Air Force's Delayed
Enlistment Program, according to
TSgt. Randy Fri sby, Air Force
recrmter in Athens.
Marcinko, a 1992 graduate of
Eastern High School, is scheduled
for enlistment in the regular Air
Force in June 1992. Upon graduation from the Air Force's six-week
ba sic trainin g course near San
Antomo, Texas, Marcinko is scheduled to receive basic training in the
mechanical career field.
Marcinko will be earning cred1ts
tow ard an assoc1ate deg ree in
applied sciences through the Community College of the Air Force
while attending basic and technical
traming schools.

$75. Course participants will ::
receive instruction, course work- ;
sheets and a take-home practice :·
daskeue. Pre-registration deadline •
for both sessions is Monday, Jan. •
13.
Lotus is the ·leading application
program for MS-DOS computer ·
,spreadsheets. In this intermediate '
class, participants will learn more :
advanced functions, such as intra- ·
ductory macros, graphing, database ·
functions, windows, range ·names, :
and printing functions.. Participants '
should already be famihar with the
basic Lotus spreadsheet functions.
Instr ucting th e cla ss will be
Chuck Clark. Continuing Educa- ·
tlon classes at the University of R10
Grande generate Continuing Edu- ~
cation Units. Participant s will ·
receive a continuing educauon certificate for .7 CEUs.
Further information on the
workshops and registration information may be obtained from the
Office of Contmuing Education,
University of Rio ·Grande, Box
878, Rio Grande, Ohio 45674, or
by ca l lin g 24 5-5 353 , ex tension
325. The toll-free number in Ohio
IS 1-800-282-7201.

. THE CLASS OF ·~ - AUending the 25th reUnion of the Gal·
Aca~emy High School Cll!ss of 1966 were ftrst row,· rrom lert,
Thor Nrelsen, Jon Facemire, Nick Johnson, Tyrone Richards,
Charles Gatewood, Gary Brown, Tom Greene, Tom RusseU, Jack ·
Balles, Mike Kerns and Bob Woodward; second row, rrom left,
Charlotte McCarty, Hope Ballard Guiatlrer Elizabeth ''Cissy"
Johnson, Rimfa England, Sharon Lyons Sllnp~n, Suellen Samples
Victor, Bonnie Varney Tawney, Frances Varney Skidmore, Bev
Rusk Alberchinski, Sheryl Roberts, Patty Venters Frissoro
Martha McKean Brown, Sheri Johnson Foster, M. Lynn Elliott
Mega, Gay Bastlani Lanier; third row, from left, Edna Ford
Richards,, Tom Folden, Lynn Carlson Morrow, Sharon Roberts

Ita

GAHS class of 1966 conducts its 25th reunion
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
Academy High School Class of
1966 held its 25th reunion- Qver the
Fourth of July weekend, with 62
alumni and guests attending the
"Memories Night" at the Holiday
Inn on July 5.
Program highlights included
introductions, re-reading of selections from the senior Gallia Script,
reviewing old pictures, memorabil·
ia and "oldies" music.
Class members Sharon Ann
Roberts Bush and Rosalee "Rusty"
Walker coordinated and narrated
the evening's events. Class pictures
were taken by Dave Tawney and
are avrulable at Tawney's Stud1o.
On July 6, a family picnic was
held at the Chink Haskins Memorial Park and was attended not only
by class members, their spouses,
guests and children, but also by

For That Special
.Occasion.•.

Special occa~ions require special preparations . If you are planning a wed·
ding, anniversary or prom, than you
should come see us at Haskins- Tah·
ner.
You will have over 190 styles of tux·
ados to choose from. Wa have a large
selection of the latest styles and com·
plimentary accessories for this special
occasion.
Quality Formalwear
at Affordable Priees,
GROOM TUX FREEWlTH 6 OR
MORE IN WEDDING PARTY

0ptn Mon. &amp; Fri. 'til I p.m.; Tu11.,

~td.

parents of the class members. The
reunion concluded that night with
the "25th Reunion Night."
Class President Frank "CIIip"
Janes welcomed class members,
guests and former teachers Marjorie Nash from Ashland, Ohio,
and Keith Brown from Gallipolis,
who were teacher-guests of the
class. The program included the
presentation of messages from
classmates present and absent, letters from teachers unable to attend,
awards for classmates and a tribute
to those classmates and teachers
who have served or whose children
arc serving in the mililary.
At least three classmates were
involved in Desen Storm - James
Benson, Mike Plymale and Jack
Bailes. Former classmates and
teachers who have died and were
remembered in tribute were David

Heath, B1ll Hanson, Barbara
Chevalier, Richard Sanders , Rita
Cousins, Roger Cromlish, Roger
Lovett, Ruth Gillingham, William
Northup, Frank and Sara Porter,
Fred Hamrick, A. Kimball Suiter
and Ruth Fiske.
The final program concluded
with the singing of the GAHS alma
mater, led by former Madrigals and
choir members. An open dance followed with continuing re-acquainting of classmates.
Classmates traveling the farthest
were Tom Folden and Charlotte
McCarty (California), Diana
McCreedy Mills (Texas), Karen
Hanlcins Bryant (Colorado) and Jon
Facemire (Alabama). Classmates
marned to former classmates are
Paul and Patsy (Gabrielli) Coulson
(also married the longest in the
class). Bob and Jane (Robinson)
Woodward, Bill and Bonnie (Var-

POMEROY - Daniel Buckley,
son of Bryce and Pam Buckley,
was recently crowned the !-yearold king of Sunburst USA Beauty
Pageant held at the-Grand Central
Mall in Parkersburg, W.Va.
As king, he received a crown,
two trophies and a banner and his
$200 entry fee to the National
Fi nals which will be held in
Atlanta, Ga., Aug. 15-18.
He was sponsored in the
pageant by his parents, and his
grandparents, Mr. and .Mrs. John
Riebel Sr., and ,Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Buckley, all of Pomeroy.

THE FOLLOWING
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
WILL CLOSE AT 3:00'P.M.
TUE·SDAY,·
DECEMBER 31 st:

•Ohio Valley Bank
•Unity Savings
&amp;Loan.

piuif to recuperate, then start the
process all over. I just can't do that
anymon:," he said.
Ryser, however, doesn 't plan to
give up. He wants to continue writ·
ing songs with his sister, Diane.
And, he hopes to pursue a dream of
going back to school to study
medicine.
"I think there's a lot of good I
can do."
Ryser said he went public with
his condition because he wants oth·
ers to know they can overcome
obstacles to achieve their goals.
" I proved what I wanted to
prove: that I was good enough to
have a hit song on the basis of talent and not because I was handi·
capped," he said.
"If I died tomorrow , I'd die
w1th a smile on my face. I did
achieve success. I did achieve my
goal."
Ryser's contract with Artsta
expired in October, and the label
has until the end of January to pick
up an option. He' s hoping it
The last year he has batdoesn't.
direction, but the Hollywood foreign Press Association overlooked tled with the label over mus1c for
his second album.
her performance in the film .

.'

446·2134
1·800·300·0208

CLINIC DONATIONS - Three of Holzer Clinic's Internal
Medicine nurses, rrom left, Vickie Wilcox, Diane Young and Clara
Bingham, are pictured with the Christmas rood baskets provided
by all clinic staiT and employees. Individual donations made by the
generous gins ~ble ror chemotherapy patients experiencing dif·
ficulty during the holidays. The rood was personally distributed
before Christmas by the nursing starr.

(Ohio Only)

Classes To Start
Your New Year•••

•

IISfOIIIC
OITHOTOIIIC
KEEPSAKE

279!.1

1

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif, (AP) Silence of the Lambs " each
- "Bugsy," Warren Beatty's ver- received five nominations.
sion of mobster Bugsy Siegel, gar"Beauty and the Beast," Disnered a leading eight nominations ney's new animated film of the
Friday for the Golden Globe classic fairy tale, received four.
Awards.
nominations, as did two controver"The Fisher King" and "The sial movies: " JFK," Oliver
StOne's look at the John F.
Kennedy assassination, and th e
female buddy movie "Thelma &amp;
Louise.' '
Winners for the 49th Golden
Globes awards will be announced
Jan. 18 in a program scheduled to
(Items for the commu11ity cal· appear on cable television's TBS
endtu appear two days prior to an network.
event. Tltty must be received by
Barbra Streisand's "Tbe Prince
the Gallipolis Dally Tribune in of Tides" was nominated for best
advance for publica/lim) -.._
dramatic film and Streisand
received a nomination for he r

..

beginning Tuesday, Jan. 7 at 6 p.m.
The cost of the 10-week class
wh1ch will be held on Tuesdays
from 6 to 10 p.m., is $272.
.
For more i~forma tion, contact
Sharon Carm1chael at 446:5019
(work) or ~6-1056 (home).

Hurry, Do

It How!

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FOR INSURANCE PURPOSES WE WtU COME
INTO YOUR HOME AND VIDEO YOUR
P088E8810H8.
BE SAFE, VIDEO FOR
PERMANENT RECORD.

Monday, Dec. 30
CHESHIRE - Cheshire Chapter. OES inspection of officers,
7:30p.m. Members bring sand·
wiches and cookies.

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Tuesday, Dec. 31
VINTON - Fellowship Chapel
will have a watch night service at 8
p.m. A film , "Distant Thunder,"
will be shown. There will also be
special music and refreshments.

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KANAUGA - New Year's
Eve watch ni~ht service, Silver
Memorial Bapust Church, 7 p.m.

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Services chanRed
ATHALIA - Wednesday services at DiUon Chapel Church have
been changed 't() Thursdays at 7
p.m. until further notice, according
to the Rev. Bob Persons.

1

48

6PI(([
IEOIONALS

Sunday, Dec. 29
EUREKA - Christ United
Methodist Church potluck supper,
5:30 p.m. Movie "The Fourth Wise
Man," 7 p.m.
1.....

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lULL! at

Gallia County
Calendar

HMC offers sociology' class

Bring In IllY type of 8 mm film lll1d wo wilt lnlntlor up to so toet or
lim onto VHS Tope.
Wo have bllnll video llpM •lltobto tor purchoH, or bring In your
own, unuood ouper high grodo tlpe.

1

Beatty's 'Bugsy' leads Golden Globe nominations

.'

FREE VIDEO TltANSFER

I•

.

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - After
32 operations and unrelenting pain,
guitarist-singer Jimmy Ryser is
saying goodbye 10 the road.
A New Year's Eve performance
at an Indianapolis hotel will be his
last, he says.
Ryser, 32, was born with spina
bifida, a hole in his back where part
of his spinal column was supposed
tO be.
"My health has deteriorated to
the pomt where I just can't do it
anymore," he said this week.
For the past year, he has stru~ ­
gled to make a follow-up to hts
debut album, "Jimmy Ryser."
Three songs were released as singles, "Same Old Look," "Ram
Came," and "Wishing and Waiting.' '
''I never learned to compromise.
I would go and go and go until I
dropped , spend a week in the hos-

Thurs. &amp; Sat. 'tl 5 p.m.

SPRING VALLEY
PLAZA ·

ney) Tawney, and Ty and Edna
(Ford) Richards. Coordinators and
MCs for "Reunion Night' activities
were Tom Gooch and Barbara
Parks Caldwell.
.Other classmates who helped
with the reunion activities were
Bev Roush Alberchinski, Jackie
Knight, Gary Brown, Sheri Johnson Foster, Debbie Evans Donshov
and Tom Greene. A memory book
with current addresses of all available classmates, pictures from the
reunion, brief autobiographies of
contributing classmates, and hig h·
lights of the reunion will he avail·
able after the New Year. Tbese will
be sent to all who attended or who
ordered and may be ordered by
contacting Barbara Parks Caldwell
at 446-2782. Plans for the class's
30th reunion activities have already
begun .

250 today, Robinson said. St. Boni- • ·
face has 800 members, he said.
•
Cincinnati Archbishop Daniel .Pilarczyk ordered the merger in ."
February.
St. Patrick Church was founded
in 1853 as St. Aloysius. Within a .
decade, the groups of Irish and · .
German settlers each wanted their :
own church because of ethnic dif· ·
ferences.
.:
Tbe two groups drew straws Ill: ·
see which 'would get to stay at St.
Aloysius. The Germans lost and ·
went off to build St. Boniface. St.
Aloysius became St Patrick.
John Schneider, a retired ·
Cincinnati firefighter who was
married at St Patrick, said the folk· ··
lore of hatred between the Irish and ·
German seiUers is false.
"The main problem was Ian· ·
guage," Schneider said . " They .
always got along preuy well. Even· .
today, we still go to their festivals
and they go to ours. Lots of people ..
at both churches come from German-Irish families ," Schneider
said.

Disabled rocker Ryser
bids farewell to the road

Youth wins crown

STUDENTS VISIT LIBRARY -In observance or the recent
National Children's Reading Week, students rrom the Guiding
Hand School visit~ the Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial Library.
There, they wer~ giVen a tour and entertained by stories presented
by Chab Guthne, The students presented Guthrie with a book
rrom th_e school, t~ be placed in the. library's new wing. A rriends
or the ~1brary cerllfic~te was a~ g1ven. Guthrie, seated at Iert, is
seen w1th students Tma McGmre and John Russell and Teresa
Eastman, coordinator or Reading Week and speech p;thologist.

GALLIPOLIS - Professor
Charles Jarrett, director of admissions for Oh1o University's Ironton
branch campus, will teach Sociology 329 (Minority Relations), a
four-hour class, in the French 500
Room at Holzer Medical Center

CINCINNATI (AP) - Mpre
than a centUry ago, cultural differences between Irish and German
immigrants led to the creation of
two Roman Catholic parishes.
A priest shortage and falling
attendance now are forcing the
jlarishes in the Northside neighbor·
hood to unite.
At 11:30 a.m. Sunday, parish·
ioners will celebrate the last Mass
at the Irish church, S.t Patiick. The
congregation then will march in a
parade to SL Boniface, just a half·
mile away, and the merger will be
complete.
"The most pressin~ reason for
the closure of SL Pat's 1S a shortage
of priests," said the Re~o~. Joe
Robinson, the church's pastor.
Bush, Mary Nash McNauU, Patty Spencer Craig, Jane Robinson
Robinson will become pastor of
Woodward, Diana McCreedy Mills, Patsy GabrieUi Coulson, Bon- · St. Boniface. The Rev . Robert
nie Bosworth Coe, Roslllee Walker, Marilyn Saunders Craig,
Stricker, who has been the pastor at
Paula Cotton Bretz, Rhonda Garlic Tabor, Diane Elliott DrumSt. Boniface, will become the assomond, Cheryl Salisbury, Sandy Adkins Saxon, Jackie Knight, Bar·
ciate pastor until he retires in 1993.
bara Parks CaldweU, Karen Hankins Bryant; back row, rrom lert,
St. Patrick members also had
Steve Betz, Pete Anderson, Johnny Hood, Hoyt Mlller, Ed Hamil·
been expecting the church to close
ton, Chris Roderick, Gary Thomas, Frank "Chip" Janes, Earl
because of a drop in attendance
"Butch" McCormick, Tom Gooch, Bill Tawney; Mike Plymale,
from 1,500 three decades. ago to
Kennison Saunders; James Edward Houck, Fred Winters, Paul
Coulson. Attending bu.t not in the picture were Merrill' Garnes,
Sue Drummond Michael and Justin MiUer.

i:

In the service

ARLINGTON , Va. (AP)- Not
even a nun's habit could help Joan
Collins esca pe the reputation of
evil Alexis.
Collins says she isn't what people think after years of playing the
wealthy, scheming " Dynasty"
character.
At first, being confused with
Alexis " upset me," Collins told
USA Todny in an interview pub·
lished Friday. " But then I thought,
there's absolutely nothing I can do.
I can't go around in a nun's habit. "
She did that in one of the more
freewheeling " Dynasty" episodes
and it only increased her mystique.
Miss Collins, 58, is playing the
fluffy . high-spirited Amanda to
enthusiastic th eater audi ences
around the country in Noel Coward's comedy " Private Lives.'"
The show is due to reach Broadway
in February.

...

!

RG offers instruction in Lotus 1-2-3

Homeland honors Marlene Dietrich
BERLIN (AP) - Marlene Dietri ch's homeland had kind words for
her Fnday - her 90th birthday.
Walter Schaben, director of the
Frankfurt Film Museum, wrote m
the national daily newspaper Die
Welt that some Germans never forgave the Berhn-born actress for
switching allegiance to the United
States during World War II.
" Many do not want to accept
that her engagement in the war was
nothing other than her form of loy·
alty and love for her old homeland.
It is high time to understand that, "
Schobert wrote.
Miss Dietrich was already a star
when she went to the United States.
As a fervent anti-Nazi, she took
U.S. citizenship. She has lived for
years as a recluse in Paris.
She was " the only world star
that Germany produced," Schaben
wrote.

Priest shortage forces
feuding parishes to unite:

Montgomery. ·
•.
The speaker was State Rep. •·
Mark'M1alone, who discussed legis- •
lation and how the government
works. "We are here to serve the '
people who elected us." he srud.
t
The 50/50 pot was won by :
James· Baird who donated it back •
to the associ~tion. Election of officers was held, with Jeff Fowler ,
named president; Mike Conkle, ;.
vice president; and Barbara )(em- •:
per, secretary. The next meeting ~·
wiU be in March.
::

on Tuesday, Jan. 14 and Thursday,
Jan. 16 from 6:30-9:30 p.m. An all·
day session will meet on Wednesday, Jan. 15 from 9 a.m.-4:30p.m.
The class will meet m the College of Business Computer Lab,
Room 108. Cost of the workshop is

Sunday T)mes--Sentlnei-Page-87.

Pomeroy-Middleport--:Galllpolle; OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Legislator addresses clerks, trustees ~:

Ann
Landers
11

Dear Ann Landers: What is the
accepted office anire for gentlemen?
Anyone will tell you it's the suit
jacket and ue. a combo that has been
around for only the last century or
so.
That bulky layer of fabric across
the back and chest and the red
power rag knotted intb a choke hold
over the Adam's apple convey the
unspoken message: "rm a member
of the establishment, like 40 million
other jerks.who look just like me."
And that's a message that any
corporation can appreciate. That's
why a man cannot hope to get or
keep a JOb unless he wears that
regulation uniform, whether the
temperature is 100 degrees or below
zero, rain or shine.
I've found that while at work, my
thoughts rarely wander far from my
own neck because, like a masochist,
I wrapped a rope-like piece of cloth
around it before I left the house. I
do so because the boss says I musL
Often, when I'm entertaining a
client, the entire region beneath my
jacket becomes a marsh. Every inch
of my white shin .is weL I don't let
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great.
At one time, designer Edith Head
was sa1d to be working on a new
·idea .. an attractive, lightweight
jacket for men that would not
require a tie. I couldn't believe it.

December 29, 1991

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Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolls,·OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Increase in smokeless tobacco usage ·alarms health officials.
By RAY FORMANEK Jr.
Assodated Press Writer
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP)
- When 17-year-old Todd
Dittman must lose weight before a
wrestling match, he puts wads of
Copenhagen snuff between his
cheek and gum.
·
"It's a good substitute when
you can't eat because you' re trying
to make your weight. I don't think
it hurts rile at all. But I haven't
been using it that long. I'll quit
before 1-get cancer," said Dittman
of Blacksville, a senior at ClayBallelle High School.
A classmate, senior Shawn Tennant, 17, said he "rubs" smokeless
tobacco to relax.
"I usc it whenever I get nervous
. or anxious about something . It
calms me down," Tennant said.
"Some people have a Snickers bar.
I rub tobacco."
The use of chewing tobacco,
snuff and other smokeless tobacco
products among the nation's teen·
agers has been increasing at an
alarming rate in recent years. said
Elbert D. Glover, a professor of
· psychiatry and behavioral medicine
at West Virginia University.
Glover, director of the school's
Tobacco Research Center and a
leading health researcher on the
product, said receding gums and
white leathery patches inside the
cheeks of many young tobacco
chewers are the ftrst inklings of a
mouth cancer epidemic within the
next 15 years. ·
"We don't have a lot of prob·
lems yet, but it takes about 25 years
of tobacco use for cancer to manifest. My estimate is that, between
2000 and 2005, mouth cancer is
going to talce off if we don't do
something about smokeless tobacco use right now," Glover said.
An estimated 12 million Americans regularly use snuff, twist, plug
and other types of smokeless tobacco, Glover said. It is chewed,
sucked or, lrt a finely ground form,
inhaled into the nostrils.
Such usage disturbs Betty
Marsee of Reading, Ohio. Her snn,
Sean, was in his senior year at Talhina High School in Talhina, Okla.,
when he died of moulh cancer that
his doctors attributed to snuff.
"He thought it was just a canker
sore," Mrs. Marsee said during a
tel~hone interview from her home
near Cincinnati. "I'm a regisrered
nurse and I know it wasn't a canlcer
sore. A head and neck surgeon told
him the next day that it was can-

it to, they don't listen when you tell
them they can get sick and die of
cancer if they use the stuff."
West Virginia ranked firsi in
smokeless tobacco use in a 1988
federal survey of the health behaviors of people living in 36 states
and !he District of Columbia.
About 20 percent of adult men
living in West Virgin.ia re~orted
using som_e form of smo ·eless
tobacco, according to the study.
One-third of the men living in one
isolated county 1'\lponed using it
Mote than 30 percent of the
users were between ages 18 and 24,
according to the survey·
''No one even comes close to

West Virginia in terms of smokeless tobacco use," Glover said.
. The cancer risk makes the high
rate of .smokeless tobacco use by
children especially disturbing to
Glover.
,
About 16 percent of 4,230 ran.. domly selected West Virginia students in grades 5-12 re~orted
chewing tobacco in a' l98 study
conducted by the slate Deportment
of Education.
·
Among the boys in the study, 29
percent Qf the 7th, 8th and 9th
graders and 39 percent of the lOth,
lith and 12th graders said they
were regitlar users. About 1 percent
of the girls in each group said they

had tried a pinch between their whose parenis have put a little bit
cheek and gum.
of snuff in their mouth to suck on,"
The study also found Ute mean she said. ''It's considered a folk:
age for trying smokeless tobacco ·' remedy for teething. It numbs the
was 10. More than half r~ported gums."
that they were regular users by the
Glover said smokeless tObacco
time they reached 11.
. us~ causes stained teeth, bad
In a 1988 national survey of col· • breath, tooth sensitivity • cavities
leg 8 t d t 22
t f the and gum recession. Olher conse·
e u en s,
percen
males and 2 percent of females quences include tooth loss, addicreponed !hat they had used smoke- lion, irritation of mouth and tcQgue
less tobacco in the previous month.
tissue and cancer. ·
"We've seen tons or problems
Research has shown that snuff
.in younger people, especially iri . or chewing tobacco delivers 10
this area,'' said Dr. Kathleen times more cancer-causing sub·
Schroeder' in oral 'biology stances to the bl6odstream than
researcher and associate director or cigarettes, Glover said.
WVU's tobacco cenler.
And an average pinch of snuff
. tobaceo pumps th rec
"Vfe've even seen preschoolers. or chewmg

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Raiders 10-6 in AFC
Wild-card contest

.-

. •
By DAVE GOLDBERG
·; ·
AP Football Writer
.~: KANSAS CITY (AP) - Deroo Cherry is a six: tilne All-Pro in his lith season. Todd Marinovich is
:a:rookie quarterback playing in his second NFL
.game.
:- The difference proved enough Saturday to give
·lhe Kansas City Chiefs their fll'st playoff win in 22
:years, a I0-6 victory over the LOs Angeles Raiders.
:· Cherry had two inrerceptions, one setting up the
game's only touchdown as the Chiefs forced six
. turnovers in beating the Raiders for the third time
,tl!is season. Marioovich, who threw three 1D passes
and had no interceptions in his farst start, a 27-2lloss
.to Kansas City last week, threw four interceptions
·this tim~ and was just 12 of23 for 140 yards. ·
::: It ·was a bitrer playoff debut for Marinovich, the
:controversial left-bander who was raised by his
·Cather to be a pro quarterback. Marinovich left South.em California after two stonny seasons and an arrest
:on drug charges.
The win was the first in the playoffs since the
Chiefs beat Minnesota in the 1970 Super Bowl. It
sent them on to Buffalo or Denver for a secondround game next week. They will play in Buffalo
unless the New York Jets upset Houston on Sunday.
Aside from Steve DeBerg's 11-yard second-period TD pass to Fred Jones, one play after Cherry's
·interception, Kansas City's offense didn't do much.
It·consisted mainly of Barry Word, who gained 130
yards in 33 carries.
. The defense surrendered 107 yards in 20 carries to
·rookie Nick Bell, but stiffened each time the Raiders
approached the goal line - despite the loss during
the game of four starters, includin~ All-Pro lineback-

er Derrick Thomas, who left in ihe second quarter
with an unspe\:ified illness.
.
The Raiders also hun themselves, reaching the
Chiefs' 22 with four minutes left before self-deslrucing. They had a holdin~ call, a false start, a facemask
penalty and an offenstve pass interference call !hat
forced them back to a'ftrst-and-30 on their 41.
Then reserve linebacker Lonnie Mans intercepted
Marinovich 1\) seal the victory for the Chiefs, 10-6 in
the regular season. The Raiders, 9-7 this season,
tacke4 on a personal foul in the next series for good
measure as they lost to the Chiefs for the fifth
straight time.
It was the first home playoff game for Kansas City
since a memorable overtime loss to Miami on Christmas Day, 1971, the longest game in NFL history.
This time it Slalted like it might be memorable for the
Chiefs.
They. got into Raiders territory on their first four
possessions, but were lhwarted by two missed field
·goals by Nick Lowery, a fumble and an interception.
One miss was from 33 yards, Lowery's first miss in
23 tries from inside 40 yards this year.
They finally scored on the fifth series, after Cherry got his second interception and returned it to the
Los Angeles II. On the first play, DeBerg hit Jones
in the back of the end zone to make it 7-0.
It was 7-3 at the half as Bellied the Raiders on a
10-play, 65-yard march !hat Jaeger capped with a 32·
yard field goal. Jaeger added a 26-yarder on the ftrst
possession of the secQnd half afrer a 62-yard, !!-play
drive on which Bell carried seven times for 44 yards.
Then LOII'ety made an 18-yardcr midway through
the founh quarter after a 13-play, 61-yard drive led
byWord.

Xavier McDaniel, playing in his
SOOth career NBA game, led New
York wilh 32 points, including five
in ovenime. Greg Anthony started
his first game of the year in place
of Jackson, whose wife gave birth
to a boy Saturday, and registered
career highs with 20 points and 13
assists. Starks carne off the bench
to add 20, five in the·extta session.
"We're very fortunate to win.
I'm.not pleased wilh the way we're
playing at all," New York head
coach Pat Riley said. "We really
didn't sustain the game and had
major breakdowns that we need to
work with, but I'll take it. Thank
you, John Starks."
' Starks' l)eroics·carne after Indi-

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POINT PLEASANT - Jeanie
Shato, R.N., cardiac rebabilitation
·nurse at Pleasant Valley Hospital,
·has been elected treasurer of the
:West Virginia Association of Car·dioVascular and Pulmonary Reha:bilitation, according to Inez Howes,
·R.N., B.S.N., director of nursing
:services.
• WV ACVPR is an assocation
:dedicated to the advancement of
quality care in cardiac and pul·monlry rehabilitation throughout
WesfVirginia.
Shato, who has been a member
·of the PVH nursing-staff since May
:1990, earned her nursing diploma
:from St. Mary's Hospital School of
·Nursing in Huntington. An Ameri:Can Red Cross volunteer, she is
·also a member of the American
:Association of CardioVascular and
l'ulmonary Rehabilitation.
• Shato and her husband, William,
:reside in Patriot and arc the pirents
:or two sons, Billy, 10, and Michael,

2 79c
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NEW YORK (AP) - On a day
when top scorer Patrick Ewing
managed just six points, a day
when starting point guard Mark
Jackson could not play, a day when
they let a 20-point second half lead
disappear, the New York Knicks
survived Saturday.
· · Not only survived, but won.
The Knicks defeated the Indiana
·Pacers 115-106 in overtime, using
a three-pointer by Joho Starks with
.1.6 seconds remaining to tie the
game and !hen outscoring the Pacers, 14-5, in the extra session to
improve their home record to 12-1,
Indiana was held scoreless for the
. first 3: 10 of overtime and hit just
one field goal in the extra session.

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ASSORTED FLAVORS

'iimts- ientintl Section C

Sports

N.Y. Knicks down Indiana in OT

SMAll ~uRD. LARGE CURD OR LOWFAT

cer."

Marsee died in February 1984,
nine months after doctors diagnosed his cancer and removed
much of his tongue, chcelcs, lymph
glands, facial nerves and arteries
and all of his right jaw.
"I don't think he ever tried to
quit," said Mrs. Marsee, 55, who
now speaks to about 9,000 school
children each year about the dangers of smokeless tobacco.
"My husband had died Ute year
before from hean problems relared
to smok'ing so Sean never
.smoked," she said. "But if you
·live in Oklahoma, you know that
:75 percent of the kids in school use
: smolceless tobacco.
"Kids think they're going to
:live forever," she said. "Unless
:they have someone they can relare

times more nicotine ~to th_e body
thrpugh the linin~ of the mouth
than the avmge Cigarette delivers
through the lungs, according-to
·Glover.
·
The nicotine jolt speeds the
heartbeat, lllises blood prcsswe and
conuibutes to heart disease and
aneriosclerosis,researcherssay.
Mark McHale, a ..w.-•• ~ •• ~or
•....-....·-·
the Smokeless Tobacco Counc
. il, a
uade group based in WashinfOO,
D.C., chaUengelf Glove~·s findings,
saying _they had not been proven. .
"The only response the counctl
has io make is that smokeless
tobacco has not been scientifically
established to cause any disease
oral can•

OPEN DEC. 311!.
UNTIL 9:otlpm

Boneless
Chicken Breast

'.

December 29, 1991

ana battled back wilh a 19-3 burst
over a span of 6:40 in the fourth
quaner 10 tum a 91-76deficit into a
95-94 advantage with 2:16 left.
Detlef Schrempf, who led the Pacers with 28 points, scored eight
during the run while Chuck Person,
playing with five fouls , added consecutive three-pointers,
New York, which has won five
of its last six ·games, scored the
game's ftrst eight points and never
trailed until the Pacers ' fourth quarter rally, The Knicks had led
by as many as 20, 86-66, with 12
seconds remaining in the thircl
quarter on Starks' driving layup.
New York continued to hold a
comfonable lead, 91-76, wilh 8:56
left in lhe game before the Pacers
came on.
"Our defense finally came
together, we got steals, scrambled,
. and we just took them apan," Indiana head coach Bob Hill said. "We
put ourselves in position to win the
game. A tough one to lose when
you come back like thaL"
The Knicks regained a threepoint lead, 98-95, on McDaniel's
two foul shots with I :25 left in regulation. But Indiana responded
with six straight points, capped by
Michael Williams' two foul shots
wilh 8.4 seconds left, to take a 101·
98 lead.
New York called timeout and
Starks evaded one defender and
connected on his three-pointer to
force the overtime.
"You always want Ute ball in
that situation," said Starks. "In lhe
shootaround, I was practicing a
last-second shot so I knew I'd be
ready if I was· called upon. l
pumped-faked and (Michael)
Williams came flying by me. Then
I just shot it. It felt real good , I
thought it was going to go in.''

HERE COMES THE WORD - L.A; Raider
defensive back Eddie Anderson bas a personal
. encounter or the bard-bitting kind with tbe
Word....: Kansas City running back Barry Word

Thriller-Super Bowl, World
Series, Magic year's top stories
By JIM·DONAGHY
Associated Press Writer
Even before Magic. it was a
magical year in spons.
The Minnesota Twins and the
Atlanta Braves played the most
exciting Wodd Series ever.
The college football year staned
with dual national champions and
the NFL season ended with the best
Super Bowl ever. Michael Jordan
carried the Chicago Bulls to the
NBA title and Duke stunned a
UNL V team that had been conceded the NCAA basketball championship.
Carl Lewis set a world record in
the greatest 100-mcter dash ever
run and Mike Powell broke a 23yea r-old long jump record everyone felt only Lewis could break.
Sergei Bubka seemed to break
the pol e vault record every week
and John Daly. George Foreman,
Jimmy Connors, Rick Mears, Meg
Mallon and Tonya Harding gave
sports fans a bushel of special
moments.
But it was all overshadowed on
that day in November when Magic
Johnson stepped up to a microphone and told !he world he has the

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GAHS beats Alexander 49-42
ALBANY - Senior forward .
Dena Greene scored a game-high
24: points - nearly half of Gallia
Academy's total offense- m Ute
Blue Angels' 49-42 win over
Alexander Sarurday afternoon.
:Greene was ~ne of on I~ thr~e
· pJ4yers to score m double digtts m
the game. Alexander's Teather
Sooth (17 points) and Jaime RolstQn (II) were the others.
·In the reserve game, Meghan
Kolcun's 9-for-12 effort at the foul
lin_e helped Renee Barnes' Angel&amp;
to a five-point win.
:The Angels, 3-5, will play Fairland at Proctorville on Thursday.
Qiaarter totals
GaUia Academy .12 16 12 9 = 49
Alexander ............6 10 15 11 =42
;cama Academy (49) Gttene 12-0-0=24; Huffman 2-0-

:'I

4=8; Reynolds 3-0-1=7; Morris 30-0=6; Coleman 2-0-0=4. Totals
-22-0·5=49
Field goals- 22.56 (39.3%)
Three-pointers- 0-1
Foul shots-5-9 (55.6%)
o Rebounds- 23 (Adams 7)
Asslsts-16
Steals - 23 (Morris 6)
Turnovers- 16
Ale~ander (42)- South 7-10=17; Rolston 4·0·3=11; Davis 20-0=4; Gilkey 2-0-0=4; Lawson 20·0=4; Worlrntan 1-0-0=2. Totals
-18-1·10=42 '
Foulshots- 3-10(30%)
Reserve game - Gallia Academy 32, Alexander 27
Top scorers - Kolcun (Gallia
Academy) • 17; Jenny Merckle
(Alexander) - 10

virus Utal causes AIDS.
A spons hero, a man with all the
riches and fame anyone could ask
for, knocked on everyone's door
with the news that Ute AIDS Vli11S
could strike anyone anywhere.
From L.A. the word travelled
around the world and people
sce~ed to be listeni~g. .
,.
Smce Mag1c made h1s cond1Uon
known on Nov. 7, calls to AIDS
hotlmes have soared and testmg for
HIV has increased throughout the
world.
,
.
.
Johnson s new comm•tment 1S
to become a s ~ok es man for the
cause and use h1s many powers of
persuasio n to raise money and
moral., .
,
.
T@ fCahty of Johnson s cond1tion meam he no longer could play
basketball for the Los Angel es
Lakers. The dazzlmg no-look passes and full-court dashes arc now
Mag•c memones.
''I'll still be lhe sam~ happy-golucky g uy _ !'~~ always been,··
Johnson sa1d, not someone you
should be afraid of."
What Johnson accomplished on
the basketball court will alwa~ s
bring a smile for those who saw h•s
marvelous act. And on Ute field of
play in 1991, there was a lotto
cheer about and remember.
If Magic Johnson 's career suggestcd anything, it's to hold on to
those special memories of excellence, excitemem and enjoyment.
After all, !hat's what games are for.
Dozens of individuals and teams
created magical moments in 1991.

Harding, for example, completed
the first triple axel by an American
woman on Feb. 17 to capture the
U.S. Figure Skating Championships, and Bubka became the
fir~ , man to clear 20 feet outdoors
10 the pole vault.
For a wonderful week In October, a nation took a breather from .
some of 1ts worri es to watch a
memorable World Series. It all
ended when 36-year-old Jack Morris put on one of the greatest pitch•ng performances i~ Series history
10 Game 7 as Mmn esota beat
Atlanta 1-0 on Gene Larkin's RBI
single in the lOth inning .
All this excitement came from
two teams that finished last the previous season.
Five of the seven games were
decided by one run , four on the
final pitch. The Twins stayed alive
in Game 6 when Kirby Puckett led
off Ute lllh with a home run.
"After Game 6, people started
telling me this is one of the greatest
World Sencs ever played," Twins
manager Tom Kelly said. "Then
yo u start thinking about what
you've gone through in the dugout
and you think maybe they' re right.
Maybe it was one of the greatest
ever."
There's no doubt Nolan Ryan is
one of the grea test ever, and he
proved it ye t again this season by :
pitching hi s seventh career no-hitter on May I against Toronto. On
the same day , Rickey Henderson
broke Lou Brock 's all -time stolen·
base record.

SCMT team rosters posted

PROVIDING DEFENSE- The New York Knicks' Greg Aotbo·
ny (2) provides some layup-prevention defense against Indiana
P.acer Reggie Miller during Saturday's NBA contest at New York's
Madison Square Garden, where the Knicks woo 115·106 in over~me. (AP)

Plrtvmlll with ~egea.

- ·during Saturday's AFC wild-card game in
Kansas City, Mo., wbicb tbe Chiefs won 10-6.
(AP)

_.,--.
BASKET BOUND - Gallla Academy's Lorie Neal (rlgbt) is
bound for the basket wbUe Alexander's Krls Gilkey keeps pa~e with
her during Saturday's ooo-leaJIIIe game at Albany, wbkh tbe Blue
An&amp;els WOD 49-42,

RIO GRANDE- The fourth
Scott Connelley Memorial Tournament, sponsored by Holzer Clinic,
will beJteld Sunday, Jan . 5 at 2
p.m. at the University of Rio
Grande's Lyne Cenler.
Tickets wil be $4 in advance
and at the door. Tickets will-also be
sold at all Gallia County high
schools and at Holzer Clinic.
The game will feature the
Cincinnati Reds traveling basketball team against an aU-star team of
area basketball coaches and former
players.
The tournament will benefit the
local Big Brothers/Big Sisters
chaprer.
Sponsors include Dr. David
Carman the Gallipolis Elks Club,
McDo~ld'$ of Gallipolis and Henderson, W:Va., Ohio Valley Bank,
Ohio Valley Superrnarlcers (Foodland), Star Bank, Saunders Insurance, The Stowaway and Thomas
Do-lt Center.
Here are the rosters foF the par·
ticipating teams.
·

Cincinnati Reds
Player-pos.
HL
Rob Dibble-F .............................6-4
Billy Hatcher-G ......................... 5-9
Byron Larkin-F..........................6-3
Hal Morris-F..............................6-3
Joe Oliver-F...............................6-3
Paul O'Neiii-F .......................... .6-4
Larry Starr-G ............................ .5-7
Mo Sanford-C ............................6-6

Coaching all-stars
Player-pos. .
.. t. ,
Perk Ault-G ............................... S-8
Rusty Bookman-F......................6-3
Nick Davenpon-F ......................6-6
Frank Doudna-C ........................6-6
Ron Drexler-F.. ,.........................6-6
Chip Haggeny-G .......................S-8
Steve Holley-F...........................6-2
Carl Johnston-F .........................6-3
Jim Osbome·G ........................5·10
Steve Randolph·F ......................6-2 .
Tom Riccardi-C .........................6-6
Brett Wilson-G ........................ 5-10
•

�•
•
Page-C2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

•

December 29, 199j .

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Logan·records ~5-46 victory ov~r M~lg~ Friday, night.::::. _··
By DAVE HARRIS
T·S Correspondent
ROCK SPRINGS -The Logan
Chieftains scqred the game's first
14 poiniS and rolled over the Meigs
Marauders 65-46 in non-conference basketball action Friday night
The loss drops the Marauders to
3-2 overall and gives the Chieftains
a 3-2 mark.
·
Meigs played without the services of junior point guard John
Bentley, who is out indefinitdy

with an severe ankle injury. Bentley, who is averaging 16.5 poiniS a
contest, suffered the injury m practice Thursday evening.
Logan roared out of the blocks
fast and quickly opened a 14-0 lead
before Shawn Hawley put the
Marauders on the scoreboard with
a bucket with 1;52 left in the peri·
od. Joe Hanning scored six of the
Chieftains' 17 points in the quarter,
with four of the points coming on
alley-oop passes frqn\ Chris Con·

rad. Trevor Harrison hit a IS•foot
jumper for Meigs with 25 seconds
left in the period to cut the Logan
lead to 15-4. Eric Burris hit a short
jumper in the pa:int to give the
Chieftains a 17-4 lead at the
buzzer.
Meigs got the offense going a
little in the second period, but the
play of Hanning and Burris was too
much for the Marauders. The pair
combined 12 of the Chieftains' 14'
second p'eriod points as Logan
opened uP a 31-16 lead at the end
of the half.
"
The Marauders have made a living (his season coming back from ·
double-digit deficits this season,

r :_..
.

..·
'

''..

Decembllr 29,

,\

'

~991

Sunday nmes Sentinel-Peg• C3 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

..,...

,·,

. ' ...
·
for
43%.
Log!U!
was
15
of
22
from
·
Meigs
will
hOst
,
A
lexander
Fribut Logan ended all ·thoughts of a
.the line for 64%.
' . day night' ·~jex1141der defepted
Ma~auder comeback, outscoring
Harrison took tile games sCoring -G~eenfield .McClam 49,~8· o~ .!1
Meogs 18-9 to open up a 49.271ead
honors
with. 21 points .. and L.J. Enc Royce JUm~ woth eoght ~­
at the end of the quarter. Hanning
Mitch
added
10. Meigs' hit 2'1 of 55 onds last night m "The Alley." In •
scored eight more points in the
from
the
floor,
including 1 of 7 ' other TVC. action last nigljt, Jack'• ·.;
·
period to pace the Chieftains.
from
three-point
range, for 38%. SOil defeated Wellstoq 79-56 on th!l' '
Logan increased the lead to 61Meigs
~it
3
of
g
free throws for Wellston Holiday Tournament !It •
31 midway into the fourth period.
3?
..
5.%
and
grab!Jed
20 rebounds, Rio Grande .. Belpre a.d•ailct4 ~the;:
Meigs outscored Logan 1,5-4 down
woV.
Harrison
getting
six.
cliamplo1~np game m, the -M~tta . •
the stretch to make the fmal&lt;fllargin
Eric
Wagner
poured
in
19
Tournament
against the host Tigers ··
19 and give Logan 65-46.
points,
and·
Jack
Stanley
added
14,
with
·a
63-52
win' oyer Parkersburg.;
Hanning led the Chieftilii!S with
·
.
.·
20 points and playe4 excellent as Meigs rolled over I,ogan in the South.
reserve
contest
63-39.
Stanley
Quarter
totals
.
.
:
··
defense. Burris, a talented 6-8
added
nine
rebounds,
rout
assists
Lo~an
...
,.:
..
:
.........
17
14
IS
16:;
li~;&lt;
senior, added•14 and a team-high
13 t&gt;f Logan's 38 rebounds. Logan and three steals as Rick Edwards' Meogs ...............:...4 12 9.21 =.46 .. ·
LqGAN (6,5) - Joe H~ning· ·
hit 2A of 54 from the floor, includ- Little Marauders rolled to their
7-0·6=20, Chris Conrad 0-1 -0=3, .
ing 2 of 4 from three-point range, third straight win.
Jeff Stivison 1·0·1=3, Eric Burris· '
6-0·2=14, Tim Mauck 1-0-0=2 ,' ·
Bram Riddlebarger 1,0-2=4, Josh:·
Jenkins 0·1·0=3, Blair Steward 2-··:
Marietta 67, Park. Catholic 53 0-3=7, Tom Smith 4-0·1=9 .· ·
verted 10 of 20 at the line.
At Marietta, Chad, Lincoln TOTALS....;. 22·2·15·65
:
Quarter totals
Jackson ............. .10 13 33 23 = 79' ' poured in 25 points in leading the
MEIGS (46) :.... Shawn Hawley ·;:
Wellston ............. IO 10 15 21 = 56 Tigers and earned the right to face 2-0-0=4, L: J. Milch 4-.0·2=10, •
JACKSON (79) - Matt Wal- the Belpre Golden Eagles in Satur· Trevor ffi!rrison 9·1-0=21, Bobby::
burn 3·0·2=8; WiUie Woodard 6·0· ddy ~s championship contest. Belpre . Johnson 1-0-0=2, Jay Cremeans 4-:
0=12; Trent Douthett 2-0·0=4; defeated Parkersburg South 63-52 0-0=8, B~ll Harless 0-0·1=1. ~
Bradd Munn 3-0~0=6; Mike Mor- m the opening game of the touma- TOTALS- 20-1-3-46 •
..
gan 7-2-4=24; Brent Jewell 7-0- ment Belpre upped it's record to 3·
2=J.6; Jamey Ratcliff 0-0-2=2; I, Parkersburg Catholic is now 3-2, · ·. Manley's Trash
Brad Piuinger 0-0-1=1; Paul and South is 2-1 entering SaturService wiD ,not
Humphreys 2-0-0=4; Chad Wooten day's contests.
1-0·0=2. TOTALS- 31-2·11=79.
The Tigers, 3-3 overall, were
run Wednesday, .
WELLSTON (56) - Scott never in serious trouble as they led
Jan. 1t 1991 but
Faughtl-0·1=3; Brad SpeQCer 2-2- by quarter scores of 16-13, 35-24,
1=11 ; Scott Cheatham 4·0·0=8; !U!d 45-34. Doug Zoller joined LinwiD run
Jason Weiland 6-0-3=15; Sean coln io double digit scoring with
Weber 1-0-0=2; Brett Fink 0-1-1- I 0 markers. Matt Cullen with 17 W~esday'• route
1=4; Steve Hendershott 1·1·2=7; points and David Dye with II
on Thursday, Jan.
Chad Stevison 1·0-~; Brent Mer- topped the losers.
2, 199Z•
rill 1-0·0=2. TOTALS - 16·4·
10=56
(See SEOAL on C-3)
614•992-~194

.
'

Rest of SEO AL 2-l iri Friday games

.

.

· SEAM SPLITTER - Meigs forward Shawn Hawley (center) .
'spliiS the seam in the Logan defense created b~ guard Jeff Stlvison
~2 2) and forward Tom Smith (right) du·ring Froday night's non-con- •
!~ renee game at Rock Springs, which the Chieftains woo 65-46.

.

A.dams records top-10 finish
~· n Maryland national race

By SCOTT WOLFE
•
T·S Correspondent
: STEWART- Racine Ohio's
Bob Adams Jr. won the Skyline
· S~eed way Late Model Track
Championship for the seventh time
iA 1991, a record unmatched in
!&lt;leal racing circles in the Ohio Vallc,y. This feat earned Adams a spot
in the national Race of Champions
at Hagerst6wn Speedway in Maryland in November.
In the 30-car field, which
i~cluded track champions from the
East Coast and Midwest, Adams
Hni shed lOth on the half-mile
trjlck.
· Albany driver Larry Bond was
second in points at Skyline, and
b(other Andy Bond from Coolville
~s third. Racine' s Scou Wolfe
w'as fourth, and Mike McDaniel of
B~lpre was fifth.
. Adams' winning mount was a
1991 Doll Chassis, powered by an
aluminum, alcohol burning 406
Chevrolet. Adams' was sponosored
locally by Five Points E~press, J.D.
Drilling and McDonald 's of
Pomeroy, and Larry Millhone
Trucking of Tuppers Plains.
Some of the pit crew includes
Larry Millhone, Billy Harris, Dick
Dugan, and Bud and Marshall Doll.
Larry Bond was sponsored
locally by Robert Ball Logging,
Whaley's Auto Parts and Facemeyer Lumber Co.
Scott Wolfe campaigned a 1991
Bullitt Chassis wilh a cast iron 406
Chevy and made 43 races. Besides
a fourth at Skyline, he was eighth
in points at Chillicothe at mid-season.
Sponsors include Eber's Gulf,
Anderson 's Home Furnishings,

Chuck Stou's Precision Automotive, O'Brien Produce, Adam s
Farms, Wolfe's Body Shop, Twin
City Machine, McDonald's and
C&amp;M Motors.
Crew members include Jason
Quillen, Jason Shain, Jim O'Brien,
and Jeff Bable, as well as many
other friends. Wolfe's engines are
buolt by.Da~e Shai~ of Antiquity
Racone s Chns Diddle had
another outstanding year, claiming
every feature race at the West Virginia Motor Speedway and a good
season at Tyler County Speedway.
Dtddle has a 1991 Rayburn semilate car.
Diddle is sponsored by J.D.
Dnl long, McDonalds, Five Points
Express; B.J. Adams Tong Service
and others .
Crew members are Jonathon ·
Rees, Pete Roush, Bany Allen, and
Scott Nease.
driver
Rich
Modified
Williamson of Rutland won his
first feature this season at
Portsmouth Raceway Park, and had
a great season at Skyline after having a fine go-kan racing career.
Racine's Bryan Wolfe had second fast time at Skyline in midAugust in his car, sponsored by
McDonald 's of Gallipolis, Nelsonville, Athens and Henderson,

Four of the six teams in the
SEOAL were in action Friday night
against non-league opponents, with
Jackson, Logan, and Marietta
notching victories while Warren
Local went' down to defeat. Athens
and Gallia Academy were iclle but
played non league opponents in
Saturday night contests.
Logan defeated Meigs 65-46,
Jackson downed Wellston 79-56,
and Marietta whipped Parkersburg
Catholic 67-53. Frontier defeated
Warren Local 75-66.
Jackson 79, Wellston 56
Playing in the University of Rio
Grande's Tournament the Ironmen
erupted for a 33·.15 advantilge in
the third quarter to pull away from
a slim 23 -20 halftime lead and
defeat the Golden Rockets.
The contest was the nightcap of
the o~ning round of the WellstQn
Runmn' Rockets Holiday Touma, ment at Lyne Center. In the lid·
lifter the powerful Russell, Ky. Red
Devils roUed over Newark Catholic
71-47, setung up Saturday's championship contest with Jackson.
The Green Wave from Newark
played Wellston in the consolation
game Saturday night.
Mike Morgan swished 2A points
to pace the lronmen (3·2) with
Brent Jewell getting 16, and Willie
Woodard adding 12 for the win·
ners. Jason Weiland paced the
Rockets with IS points and Brad
Spencer chipped in 11 for the 3·3
losers. Jackson hit 56.9 percent
from the floor on 33 of 58, made
II of 21 free throws, and claimed
35 rebounds.
The Rockets pulled down 36
rebounds, 10 by Scott Cheatham ,
made 21 of 57 fielders, and con-

I'

Friday's results-.
Alexander 49 Greenfield 48
Waverly holiday tourney2 ppnd

.* *·

8.75% A.P.R. INTEREST RATE
'

All INVENTORY MARKED DOWN FOR YEAR·END ClEAUNCE!
CEr YOI1R BElT DIAL Ar '"

Jim Qlnrhran

•

auto &amp; truck center
429 VIAND STREET

675·1985

POINT PLEASANT

'

DtiX

Jaa4pmes:
Gallipolis at Southern
Jackson at Pt. Pleasant
Warren Local at Belpre
Logan at Newark
Ironton at Wheelersburg .
I

"'

PF
281
262
315
313

.

.

·SALE

H.D. VEST FINANCIAL
SERVICES

244

203
147
210

(Conference)
Southern ..............3 0 232
Oak Hill ..............2 I 207
Eastern ................2 I 172
North Gallia ........2 I 170
SymmesValley .. .l I 117
Hannan Trace ...... I 2 195
J&lt;¥ger Creek ........O 2 95
SQuthwestern .......O 3 155
'J:OTALS .......... 11 11 1343

KARL.KElLER Ill, C.P.A.
·Registered Representative

IRA's * SEP IRA's
MUTUAL FUNDS * UIT's
MONEYMARKETS

161
192
188
180
124
197
108
193
1343

; (Reserves- SVAC only) ·
ream
W L PF PA
SOuthern .............. 3 0 168 114
Sfmmes Valley ... 2 0 84 81
Eastern ................2 1 126 109
~gerCreek ........ l I
70 73
Oak Hill ..............! 2 133 133
Hannan Trace ...... ! 2 118 149
N!Jrth Gallia ....... .! 2 112 128
Southwestern .......O 3 96 120
Tl&gt;TALS ..........11 11 907 907
. HANNAN (47)
•
Friday's scores
R. Wiley 7-13 0-0 1-5 15 15
Wahama Tournament - Sharples B. Hagley 4-10 0-0 0-1 5 8
80, Kyger Creek 52
C. Tolliver · 2-4 0-2 3-4 5 7
: They played Saturday
S.Cook
1-8 0-0 '5-7 0 7
SOuthern vs. Logan Elm (at OU- M. Smith I· 7 0-0 0-0· 6 2
T. Robinson I· 7 0-0 0-0 4 2
Chillicolhe)
R. Tolliver 0-0 0-1 2-2 0 2
Fairland at Hannan Trace
Wahama Tournament - Kyger F.. Cobb
1·1 0-1 0-0 0 2
J. Ball
0-1 0-0 1-3 0 I
Creek vs. Hannan
C. Adkins 0-0 0-0 1-2 0 1
•
This week's games
: Friday -Eastern at Oak Hill ; S. McClure 0-3 0-0 0-2 I . 0
17-54 0·4 13-26 36 47
Hannan r race at Kyger Creek ; Tot
Score
by
Quarters:
Nimh Gallia at Southwes tern ;
1 2 3 4 T
~ymmes Valley at Southern
18 17 29 21 85
• Saturday - South Webster at Wahama
Hannan
II II II 14 47
OllkHill

NOW IN PROGRESS AT
SMITH BUICK·POiiTIAC

Besides McDonald's, Wolfe is
sponsored by Eber's Gulf, Shain
Engineering , and Wolfe's Body
Shop.
Benny Hickel of Pomeroy-Wolf
Pen again did a good job in his
K&amp; K race car #51, sponsored by
Sorden Tool, Mason Auto Glass
and Banks Construction.

Friday's games:
Athens at GaUipolis
Jackson at Warren Local
Logan at Marietta
Chesapeake at Buffalo
Ironton at Portsmouth
Waverly at Portsmouth West
Symmes Valley at Southern
Wilmington at Greenfield .
Wheelersburg at Northwest
Huntington at Fairland
Vinton County at Trimble

SVAC cage standings
(OveraU)
Team
W L
Southern ..............3 I
Oak HiD ..............3 I
Eastern ................2 3
Nbrth Gallia ........2 4
Hannan Trace ...... ! 3
Symmes Valley ... I 3
Kyger Creek ........O 3
Southwestern .......O 4

wv. ·

Portsmouth 67 PureeD 63
St. Mary's 57 Pt. Pleasant 52
Logan 65 ~eigs 46
Marietta 61 Parkersburg Cath. 53
Frontier75 WarrenLocal 66
Jackson 79'wellston .56
Last night's games
Greenfield at Gallipolis
Hanilton Twp. at Waverly ·
Wheelersburg vs. Zane Trace
Southern vs. Logan Elm
Vinton County vs. Unioto
Fairland at Hannan Trace
Portsmouth tourney
Chesapeake vs. w. Union
Pr. Pleasant in Ripley tny
Logan at Lancaster
Marietta holiday tourney
Alexander at Athens

* **

NOW IS THE '.J'lME! .
Thru Jan. 5 Take Advant~ge . Of The

DCARS AND LOW MILEAGE FACTORY
CARS ARE REDUCED FOR PERSONAL
PROPEm lAX REDUCTION!

------Cage standings-----SEO, Opponents
(All-Games)
Team
W L
P OP
Chesapeake .........6 0 461 369
Fairland .............. .3 0 191 148
Waverly ...............5 I 492 407
Southern .............. 3 I 28 1 232
LOgan ....... ........... 3 2 311 288
Jackson.: ...... ........ 3 2 324 301
Marietta ............... 3 3 360 363
GaUipolis............. 2 3 253 252 ·
Warren Local ......2 4 422 423
Portsmouth ..........2 4 447 460
Greenfield .......... .! 4 202 244
Vinton County .... 1 3 212 227
Wheelersburg ...... ! 4 311 · 346
Athens ................. ! 5 368 453
Point Pleasant.. ....O 2 118 126
(SEOAL VARSITY)
Team
W L
P OP
Logan .................. ! I 134 118
Gallipolis ............ .! I 112 113
Marietta ............... ! I 111 116
Athens ................. ! I 118 128
Jackson ................ ! I 120 119
Warren Local ..... .! I 130 131
TOTALS
6 6 725 725
(SEOAL RESERVES)
Team
W L
P OP
Logan ................ 2 0 109 91
Jackson ............... 2 0 94 83
Marietta .............. I 1 94 90
Athens................ I I 83 78
Gallipolis............ 0 2 85 I05
Warren Local.. ... 0 2 80 98
TOTALS
6 6 544 544

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�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH~Polnt Pleasant, wv

Page-C4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Har-rumph!

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December 29, 1991

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Egad, friends! The question of
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n,

14 .51 7 4.5
ll

New Jmc) 136, O.arl~c 120
Clewelandl03, San Anlonlo"
HOllltm 107, Walhinaton 100
Detroit I c.i, Orlando 94
Ootden S~o.0106, Minnelcu 10 ~ OT
Ba~t«~l tO, Scauk 87

Tbey played Saturday
Indiana at New Yod:,l p.m.
Miami at Utah, 2.:30 p.m.
Charlotte Yt, WuhinJtOn 11 Balli·
mew-e. 7:30p.m.
Minnelou at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m.
S•crarnen.w at Chica11o. 8:30 o.m
Bwtm~a t Denver, 9 p.m.
DaUaaat Pbochi.a, 9:30 p.m.

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I • '

Kosar set an NFL record with 308 ..• ·"•
passes without an interception, .
•
-The University of Cincinnati,~·
1ostto penn state 81-0, then tumed
· • ;~
!he comer wi\h a 4-7 season.
•,'

Transactions

1991 OIEV.

I

so~ Browns quarterback Bernie ._':

ShooiOut Spokane
Flrtt round
Yl.le68, Vmnont64

Puzzle on Page D-2

lladloiMek

r-

Tcx.u ChrisLian 93, Coastal Carolina

'

e~ e

huskers ground out 353.2 yards per
game.
Miami is an all-around solid
football machine. In All-America
Carlos Huena, the Hurricanes have
the best place-kicker in !he college
game. ·
In his third year at the helm,
Hurricane coach Dennis Erickson,
our nominee for Coach of the Yta,
has a combined 32-3 record- a'll'd
a national title (1989) under his
belt He' ll win his second here.
· · to conunue
· · Its
·
Look for M1am1·
1 f
awesome Orange Bow per ormances, with a 40-27 victory.
SUGAR BOWL: Florida (10: 1)
vs. Notre Dame (9 •3), New
Orleans, Wednesday, Jan. 1, 8:30
p.m. EST, ABC-TV. .
To wind up the long day, Florida takes on unpredictable Notre
Dame . Coach Steve Spurrier's
Gators swept the rugged SEC and
QB Shane Matthews took his second straight SEC Player of the
Year award. The Gators have a
potent offense that averages almost
33 points per game. The defense,
sparked by All-America DT Brad
Culpepper, held high-flying Florida
State to just 9 points.
Offense is the name of the game
at Notre Dame. The Irish posted 55
TDs this fall, piling up 458 yatds
per game. The problem: "N.D."
stands for "no defense" this season. Notre Dame will score plenty
of points, but so will Florida. The
Oators will take a 42-38 victory .
_ Har-rumph!
That's it for now, folks. Have a
Happy New Year and we' ll see you
next fall. Har-rumjJh!

in Canton .added five more names
to its roll: Jan Stenerud, Earl
· Campbell, John Hannah, Tex
Schramm and Stan Jones.
Other notable achievements
included:
_ Tom Purtzer eked out a victory in the World Series of Golf at •
Firestone Country Club.
..~
-Ohio. State's Mike Racanelli ·-'liOn the floor exercises at the U.S. : •
Gymnastics Championships.
· '
- Precious Bunny took the Ut- •. ~.
tie Brown Jug at Delaware County 1
Fairgrounds.
.
.:....Mansfield's Prince Charles '·;
Williams retained his JBF light
heavyweight world boxing championship.
~
-Ohio State's baseball team
won the Bi• Ten Conference title. •
- Dublln ' s Kent Mercker . ,
helped combine on a no-hiuer and ;
also worked out of the bullpen in
the Atlanta Braves' ""nnant sea-

AII -Colltge Tournament
Fln t'round

1.5
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MICRDNTA0

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A.lbtruon 'tllolld•y Cl•u lc
Flnt round
Boise St.
Air Force 68

15
I.S

P'"·Portland at L.A. LU:cn, 10:30 p.m.

I

I II d II II I

(Continued from C-4)

•••

·

renowned for his success and innovation at Massillon Washington
High School, Ohio State. the
C!ev.clan~ Browns and then 'the
Cmcumab Bengals.
Jack Nicklaus proved ageless;
cap.turing two of the Seniors Tour's
maJors: the U.S. Senior Open and
the PGA Seniors Championships.
Meanwhile, a youngster, Kenny
Perry, won the tournament Nicklaus founded, the Memorial at
Muirfield Village.
.
Another former Obio State
golfer, Meg Mallon, elbowed her
way into women's golfs hierarchy.
On June 30. her Jfi!.foot birtlie putt
gave her me LPGA Championship
over Pat Bradley and Ayako
Okamoto. Justtw.o w~ later, she
grabbed h.er seconq ma]Of champ!onsh1p, w1Mmg the U.S. Women s
Open to agamst frustrate runner-up
Bradley.
.
The doors of Cooperstown agrun
slammed shut on Pete Rose when
the Hall of Fame's board of directors voted 12-0 to bar the bann. ed
baseball star from its ballot
But Ohio was still represented
as former Indians owner Bill Veeck
was selected. Later in the year,
Dayton columnist and sports editor
Ritter Collett was inducted into the
'writef's wing at Cooperstown.
The Pro Football Hall of Fame

;z

6

ll.S

Friday's scores

OPTIMVS

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.160

.692
.630
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.630
.536

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and Youngstown State (NCAA
Division 1-AA) all made it to their
respec;tive natiooal championship
games in football. ·Bowling Green
went from 3-5-2 to 11-1 under
first-year head coach Oary Blackney, winning the Mid-American
Conference and the California
Raisin Bowl,
Ohio football legend Paul
Brown died Aug. 5. Brown was

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Scoreboar·d

THEY MAY LOOK as ir they're trying out for "A Chorus
Line,", but these Michigan football players are working out at their
training camp at Citrus College in Glendora, Calil'., ror a. a longerrunning show tban that Broadway bit. The Wolverines will race
Washington in tbe Rose Bowl, which will begin on New Year's Day
in nearby Pasadena. (AP)

•BLACK.POWDER

.,

mg. .
swn. .
.
· AP Sports Writer
In return. the Re&lt;Js added Tim
lromcally,. former Ohio prep staJ:
· The year 1991 won't go down Belcher, B1p Roberts and a host of Desm~n~ How~d that same day
as the best 'of years for fans of other ttesh faces..
le_d .Mich1gan to ~~ fourth strrught
Ohio's professional sports teams.
The Reds sh1pped Armsuong VICtory over Oh10 State, 31-3 ,
Once again, !he Cleveland lndi- and Scudder to the Ind!afis for left- Howard struck the Reisman pose
ans w~re last, losing a franchise- bander starter Greg Swmdell. .
after returnmg a punt Jor a touc~record 105 games. ·
. Irt the college ranks, the htg~- down. The He1sman became h1s
The Browns made improvement . hghts rex?lved around the Oh1o three weeks later. .
. ..
over a dreadful 1990 season, but State mens basketball~ei~m. Led . Centtal State (m N~~ DIVISIOn
still weren't serious playoff con- by second-team All-Amencan J1m I), Dayton (NCAA D1v1s1on Ill)
tenders under rookie head coach Jackson, the ~uckeyes won their
BiD. Belichick.
first 17 games and went on to a 27- .
Nothing went righr fllr the 4 fm1s~. The Bucke~es w~n t!Jeir
.. ·
y
Cincinnati Bengals, from start to · frrst B1g T~n champ10nsh1p smce · ·
·
finish , Head coach Sam Wyche 1971 and mp to the.NCAA tourna- ·bowl matchups!
.
avoided the heavy fmes he incurred ment's Sw~t 16..
Bobby Bowden's Seminoles are
the previous year but couldn't
Meanwhlle, the football team coming off two tough losses to
avoid some stiff penalties on the p~t together.an 8-3 se.ason . The intra-state rivals Miami and Florifield, not to mention being fired bljlgest headlines of t1!C year dealt da. The Seminoles are. a talented
after the season by general manag- w1th one p_ers&lt;,&gt;n leavmg and one team, but their confidence may be
er Mike Brown. The Bengals also · person staymgm the~. .
shaken.
set a franchise recortl for losses.
. In Au~ust, Raben Sm1th, a twoOn the other hand, R.C.
And the Cavaliers, saddled by ume Oh10 Mr. Football, qu1t the Slocum's Texas A&amp;M Aggies got
Hot Rod Williams' salary : an team. He sa1d head coach John better. as the year progressed .
injury to point guard Mark Price Cooper and offensiVe coortlmator They're ri~ing a nine-game winand the enigma of Danny Ferry, Elliot Uzelac discouraged time nmg streak.
also missed out on post-season spent on.academics, and Smith said
Seminoles QB Casey Weldon,
· th e He1sman
·
·
I
pay.
he wouldn't play for .the Buckeyes runner up m
~oung,
h th d
A · QB B
. A year after winning the World again if Cooper and Uzelac
as e e ge on gg1es
ucky
Series, the· Cincinnati
Reds
did
remained
with
the
team.
He
was
Richardson
in
passing
and
total
fi h ·
· arda· R' h d
h
h
most of th err 1g tll\g among them- still reaching a decision on a col- Y ge. •c ar son, owever, as
selves and with management. After lege as 1991 came to a close.
a winning reputation. In a mild
sweeping the Oakland Athletics in ·
On Nov. 24, Ohio State athletic upset, give it to A&amp;M, 31-27.
~tober of 1990, !hey were swept director Jim Jones announced that (IOF I)EST A BOWL: Penn State
away to a 74-88 record. As a result, Cooper - with a year left on his
·2 vs. Tennessee (9-2), Tempe,
·
Ar
'
Wednes da y, Jan. 1• 4 p.m. ·
E nc :Davis, Mariano Duncan , · original five-vear deal- would be
IZ.,
Randy Myers, Jack.Armstrong and offered a three-year contract ex ten- EST, NBC-TV. ·
Scott Scudder all were sent packPenn State's Joe Paterno won
Coach of the Year honors three
times ~ in 1978, 1982 and 1986.
Johnny Majors of the Vols won the
award (at Pitt) in 1976.
..
. Agains~ their only common foe
Tonigbi's games
NFL playoff slate
th1s
season, Tennessee came from
. SanAntonicnl Odando, 7:30p.m.
Houston at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
behind to nip Notre Dame, 35-34;
First round
Miami 1\ Ponland,IO p.m.
the next week, Penn State beat the
.
They pla1'CI SofiWclay
•
Irish,
35-13.
L.A. Raider' 11 Xaruas City, 12:30
In the NHL .•.
p.m.
.
Nittany
Lion QB Tony Sacca
Atlanta at New OJicans, 4 p.m.
(169 completions, 21 TDs) figures
WALES CONFERENCE
Todly'apJDts
Palrlck Dlwblon
Dalla• al Chica&amp;o, 12:30 p.m.
to outduel Tennessee QB Andy
Team
W L T Pll. GFGA.
New Yort leta at HOUlton, 4p.m.
Kelly
(228 completions, 15 TDs).
N.Y. Ranaers ....• 24..12 l 49140116
WuitiJ1sllln ....... 2A 12 I 49165 120
Make
it
Penn State, 34-31.
Second round
PilllbwJh .......... 20 12 • 44 170 J3l
ROSE
BOWL: Washington ( 11 Saturdty 1Ju, 4
NewJency ........ 1613 6 38 129 105
Chiclgo, Dtlb.a or Alllnu. tt"Wuh 0)
vs.
Michigan
(10-1), Pasadena,
Philldclphio ....... 12 16 1 31 102!16
in&amp;ton, 12:30 p.m.
· N.Y. tdondm .... 11 17 6 2J 124 140
Calif.,
Wednesday,
Jan. 1, 5 p.m.
H~tm. K.anw Cjty or LA . Raiders
at Denver, 4 p.m
EST, ABC-TV.
Adlma DlvlliOO
Sundly, Jan. 5
MonuuJ ............ 25 13 2 52 130 89
DonJames of Washington is
Kan~u City, L.A. Raiders or N.Y.
Boam .:.............. 15 16 S 35 123 132
Jcu I \ Buffalo, 12:30 p.m.
·
shooting
for his first national title
lhrtf..d............. 1311 4 30 10!123
New Orleans, Chicago or DllJu at
Buffalo ............... 11 18 6 28 l1212S
Detroit., 4 p.m.
and his first 12-0 season. Against
Quobeo ...... ......... 9 22 5 23 115148
Michigan, the Huskies will rely
heavily on the passing of QB Billy
Conrerente cblunpionsblps
Sun tilly, J•n. U
Joe Hobert. He looks for All-AmerAFC chanipioruhip
ica
WR Mario Bailey. The WashCAMPBELL
CONFERENCE
NFC dl•mpion~hip
Norrll Dlwlllon
ington defense is. anchored by AllTum
W L T Ptl. CFGA
America DT Steve Eintman.
SuperBowt
Deuoit ................ 21 10 4 46 138 108
Sunct..r, J•n. U
But lini,ng up for the Wolverines
St. LoW "'""'"''" 17 12 7 41 ! 27118
At Mlnneapolll
Chicago.............. 15 14 9 39 129118
is WR Desmond Howard, the runMinnOIOll ......... , 14 16 . 3 31 10411 3
AFC c:hampion w1. NFC champiM
away winner of the Heisman and
Toronto .............. 10 23 S 25 971 39
Maxwell awards. Howard had 23
Pro Bowl
Smythe DlvilkJn · .
Sundly, Feb.l
TDs this fall - 19 receiving, two
Vancouver ........ , 20 ll 6 46.4 31110
At Honolulu ,.,
Wionipe8 ........... 1614 8. 4(1"117117
rushing, one on a punt return and
AFCn. NFC ,
Edmonton .......... 15 16 6 36 132137
one
on a kickoff return - and he
Los AngclCI ....... 13 14 7 33 118130
Cdgory .............. . l317 5 31 128130
In the NBA ...
only got the ball 100 times. Some
Sanl01e ............. 8 T1 3 19 96168
production, eh?
EASTERN CONFERENCE
LB Erick Anderson anchors the
Friday's scores
Allanlk Dhillon
Buffalo
8,
Bocton
1
Michigan defense; All-America OT
Tum
W L Pet.
GB
Winnipeg 3, Cn.icago 3, tic
New Y. ............,.. l7 8 .680
Greg
Skrepenak takes charge on
Philadelphia! , Vancouver l , tie
Ba~ton ......... ........... l8 9
.667
·~h
e
other
s1de for the Wolverines.
Miam.i .....~ ............. .l4 14 .500
4.5
They played Saturday
Philodelplili ........... l3 14 .481
5
In a game well worth the price of
New Jtt~Cy ........... .10 IS .357
N.Y. Rangers at N.Y. ls!anrlcn:, 5:0S
8.5
admission, Michigan will upset the
"Walhinpn .............. 9 IS .333
p.m.
9
Huskies, 31-28.
Orlando .................... 6 21
.222
Buffalo
al
Ncw
Jen:cy,
7:35p.m.
12
Hanford It Quebec. 7:35p.m.
ORANGE BOWL: Miami (Fla.)
Central Dlvlllon
Pittsburah at Wuhingtc~~ , 7:35p.m.
( 11 -0) vs. Nebraska (9·1 -1).
Philldr.fphi• at Calgary, S:05 p.m.
Chica!o..................22 4 .846
Lo.: An&amp;clcaat Edmcrnon, 3:05 p.m.
Cleve and.--......11 9 .6fi7
4.S
Miami, Wednesday, Jan. 1, 8 p.m .
St. Louilat.Mihn~oc.a, S:OS p.m.
Detroit.................... IS 14 .517
&amp;.5
EST, NBC-TV.
Milwallkcc ........... .. l3 14 .481
9.5
Dcuoit at Taranto, 8:05p.m.
· A~ .... ...................12 15 .444 10.5
Vuu:ouvc:r at S1n 1osc,10:3S p.m.
The Orange Bowl is a
lndiana ................... 12 16 .429
11
formidable
challenge for Tom
Chulotte ..................B 22 .267
16
Tonight's games
Osborne's
Nebraska
Comhuskers.
N.Y.Islandmat Hartford, 7:05 p.m.
WIRhin&amp;LOn 11 New Jmey, 7 : 3 ~ p.m.
In their last three Orange Bowls,
Pituburgh at N.Y. Ringers, 7:35 pm.
the Huskers, representing the Big
l..ol Angelc:a at Calguy, S:OS p.m.
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Monlttlllt Edmonton, S:05 p.m.
Eight, have lost. This year, though,
Mldwsl Dlvlllon
Botton at Winnipeg, 8:05p.m.
Nebraska has the Best rushin g
Team
W L PeL GB
Detroit at OUcago, S:J!i p.m.
Utoh ...•................•.. l8 12 .600
in the nation. RB Derek
offense
HOWitm. ............... .. 16 11 .593
.S
Brown
led
the way as the CornMajor
college
' Son Anlonio .......... .ll 12 .556 I.S
Dallu ................... ..l2 16 .429
5
basketball scores

~

Sunday Tlmee-Senlloei-Page C5

sees Reds, Bengals fall from grace

' By RUSTY MILkER

.
Tampa, Fla., Wednesday, Jan, 1, 1
COTTON .BOWL: Florida State EST, CBS.-TV.
Here's
one
of
the
best·
of
the
p.m . EST, NBC-TV.
(10-2) vs. Texas A&amp;M (10-1), Dat(S
HOOPLE
C
S)
ee
In his first season as head coaeh .Ias, Wednesday, Jan. I, 1:30 p.m.
on at Syracuse, Paul Pasqualoni saw
his squad puU one of !he upsets of
the year: The Orangemen defeated
Florida, 38-21, the Gators' only
..:
-loss. WR-KR Qadry "The Mis1
SUNDAY, DEC. 29, 1991 ·· .
sile" Ismail (Rocket's brother)
lO·JAN.
makes Syracuse a threat to score
PIZZA STEAK SANDWICH·. I
from any place on the field,
. and
· -~
But Ohio State, third in the Big
. I
TIIO
'fURTU
SUN.
D
ARS
Ten, is strong on defense. Th.e
~ MEDIUM FRENC~ FRIES : :,
Buckeyes allowed only 113 yards
F.OR THE PRICE
rushing per game. Syracuse is even
OF ONE
better, with a 107.8 yards per contest average. And the Orangemen
Uftl
Try Our Homemade ·. ·.
. 1 $() ~ U1 1
get the Hoople nod, 27-25.
.
CITRUS BOWL: California (9..·, ·\ .
2) vs. Clemson (9-1-1), Orlando,
Fla., Wednesday, Jan. I, 1:30 p.m.
EST, ABC-TV.
California finished a strong secTry One 01 Our Four Dlnn11s
ond in the Pac-10 thanks to senior
S~rinlp, Fls~
QB Mike Pawlawski. He threw for
191 completions and 211Ds.
c•lckea Fdlel or
ONLY
With.a solid defense, Clemson
and Qkke•
took the ACC crown. The Tigers
.allowed only 17 TDs aU year. But
354 East Main Sl
479 ~acklon Pike
Gen. Hanln~ Pkwy.
California will enjoy the long trip
. MIDDLE RT
GALLIPOLIS
POMEROY
home, savoring a hard-fought 31614-992-5248
614-446-3837
614-992-6292
28 victory.

boils down .to two key gilmes on
Jan. 1: undefeated Miami vs.
Nebraska in the Orange Bowl; and.
undefeated Washington vs. Michigan in !he Rose Bowl.
Here's how the Hoople System
sizes up the New Year's Day bowl
games:
·
PEACH BOWL: North Carolina
State (9·2) vs. East Carolina (10-1),
Atlanta, Wednesday, Jan. I, 11:30
a.m. EST, ESPN-TV.
East Carolina's Pirates are the
surprise team of 1991. They
opened with a 38-31 loss to Big
Ten power lllinois, but they went
on to 10 victories in a row, including upsets of Syracuse and Piusburgh. Senior QB Jeff Blake has
3,182 yards and 31 TDs- both on
the ground and in the air.
Coach Dick Sheridan's N.C.
State Wolfpack finished No. 2 in
the ACC. The Pack's two losses
were to ACC foes Clemson, the
league leader, and Virginia. N.C.
State has a strong ground game, led
by RB Anthony Barbour.
E.C.'s Pirates will prevail in a
squeaker, 28-27.
HALL OF FAME BOWL: Syracuse (9-2) vs . Ohio State (8-3),

sc~ne

Ohio's.l9.9l .s

.

New Year's Day bowlS promise plenty of acti~n, maybe upsets
By Maj. Amos B. Hoople
Sage of tbe Sidelines

Pleasant, wv

December 29, 1991 ·

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Bengals promote Shula
to head coaching post
By TERRY KINNEY
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATl (AP) - David
Shula was promoted to head coach
of the Cincinnati Bengals on Friday. becoming the youngest head
coach in the modem era of the NFL
and creating the league's first
father-son rivalry.
•
Shula, 32, the .son of Miami
Dolphins coach Don Shula, succeeded Sam Wyche, who left on
Tuesday amid questions and controversy. Wyche said he was fired.
The Bengals said he quit
Shula was given a three-year
contract. The salary was not
released.
.lillie appointment of the Shula
matt ed the flfSt time that a father
and son were head' coaches' in the
NFL at the same time.
The Bengals and Dolphins are
both ·in the AFC. but do not play
each other next season.
Shula, the Bengals .wide
·receivers' coach, inheriiS a team
that finished 3-13, the worst record
in
the franchise's history.
SHULA HIRED - David Sbula·, son of Miami Dolphins bead
coach Don &amp;hula, nasbes a smile shortly after announcing his being
Shula was an assistant coach
hired by the Cincinnati Bengals to replace tbe departed Sam Wyche
under his father, and was offensive
as head coach. (AP)
coordinator for two seasons for the
Dallas Cowboys. He was demoted
twice at Dallas, the last time to
passing game coordinator.
He went to the Bengals last January.
"I'm very excited about the
opportunity to coach the Cincinnati
Bengals," Shula said at a news
conference at Riverfront Stadium.
"My goals are simple: to win the
Centtal Division, and if we don't
win the Central Division, to qualify
for the playoffs. And once in the
playoffs, to win the Super Bowl.''
He said he decided he wanted to
be a head coach six years ago when
he was in Miami.
"I, of course, know no other
lifestyle. That's the way I was
raised," Shula said.
'Shula follows in his father 's
footsteps as being a young head
coach. Don Shula was the youngest
coach when he got the top job with
the Baltimore Colts in 1963 at age
33.
Shula became the youhgest head
coach in the modem era by three
months, according to the NFL.
John Madden was 32 years and 10
months old when he became head
coach of the Oakland Raiders in
1969. Shula is 32 years and 7
months old.
General manager Mike Brown
said Shula's age should not be a
problem.
''He comes from a distinguished
WILLIAMSON FIRED - Richard Williamson beads to his car
footbaU
family, and some us don't
shortly af'ler being fired as the Tampa Bay Buccaneers' head coach
hold
lhat
against him," Brown said
Friday morning in Tampa. Tbe SO-year-old Williamson got his ,
with
a
chuckle,
"He will bring
walking papers af'ler guiding the Dues to a 3-13 record in the NFC
energy
and
enthusiasm
to this job.
Central. (AP)
It's going to be a chaUenge."
Shula said his age would not be
a factor in his coaching.
"I've never found lhatl've had
any problem with exerting disciBy FRED GOODALL
year contract that will pay him pline with guys lhat are older than
AP Sports Writer
about $250,000 in 1992.
me," he said.
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Richard
Parcells, who led the Giants to
Shula thanked Wyche for the
Williamson was fired as coach of two Super Bowl championships opportunity to come to the Bengals
the Tampa Bay Buccaneers today before becoming a commentator as an assistant
in a move lhat was ·ex~X:Cted after for NBC this season, reportedly has
"I am thankful for the year that
the club finished w1th a 3-13 until this weekend to respond to the I had workin&amp; with him," Shula
record.
Bucs offer.
Bill ParceUs, who left coaching
after leading the New York Giants
'•
to a Super Bowl vic tory last January, has been mentioned as the
most likely successor, but no
replacement was named in the brief
announcememlhat Williamson was
"relieved of his coaching duties"
by Bucs owner Hugh Cui verhouse.
While other NFL teams moved
quickly to create openings for new
coaches, Culverhouse met with
Williamson Thursday and this
morning before his firing.
"He operated under ad verse
conditions this past season with the
exueme handicap of 23 new players," the owner said. "However,
Roc)' of Agea otfet'l you 1 choice of 8 different colored
our won-loss record this season
g,enlte1.
Whatever your requlrementa m.., be, complete
was not satisfactory, so after a
11 1uurld with Rock of Au.~.
.•tlaflctlon
great deal of thought, I have decidOpen Mon., Tuea., Thura. &amp; Fri. 9:00 1.m. 'tU 4:00 l!.m .
. ed to go with a new head coach and
Other Houra by Appolntment-883-88811 or 446·it;t27
staff in 1992."
Parcells is said to have been
offered about $6.5 million over five
, . , ... OIL
years to leave NBC-TV for the
Bucs, who haven't had a winning
record since 1982.
Culverhouse and Parcells have
successfuUy negotiated most of the
key components of a long-term
contract agreement, an unnamed
source close to both principals told
The Orlando Sentinel for today's
erlitions.
Parcells was upset about published reporiS regarding the Bucs'
offer and would not comment on
the slatus of negotiations, except to
deny an agreeJJ~ent is imminent
"This is what I want you to
wrile: My situation has not
· changed since I left the New York
Giants," Parcells told the Sentinel
by phone from New Jersey. "I am
not going to comment on anything
else. To say there is a deadline
would presume thei'Jl has been an
offer. You said there is a deadtine.
There is no deadline. You said
there is an offer. There is no
offer."
Williamson, 50, replaced Ray
Perlcins in·DeCember 1990 and has
led the Bucs to a 4-15 record. He
1276 Jacklo•
Rio
has one year remaining on a two-

said. "I've learned a great deal
from him about footbaU and about
working 'wiih the Bengals. I have a
great deal of respect for him as a
person and as a coach.''
He said he did not criticize
Wyche's h8ndling of the team during this season.
"Our team played bard, risht up
to the last second of the last
game," Shula said. "You've gotto
give Sam credit for that."
Shula said he has filled four
assistant coaching positions: Jim
. McNally, line; Jim Anderson, running backs; Dan Bible, quarter.backs, and Marv Braden, special
·teams.
"As of right now, that's as
much as I'm prepared to say about
the composition of the staff,"
Shula said.
He said a priority wiU be to hire
a defensive coordinator.
"I have candidates in mind.
Mike and I have talked about it,
and I've talked with other members
of the staff, and I have a list of people. I will'be contacting shortly,"
he said.
Defensive coordinator Dick
LeBeau, linebackers coach Dick
Selcer and defensive line coach
Chuck Studley were let go, along
with tight end coach Mike Stock.
Quarterback Boomer Esiason
said in an interview with Cincinnaii
television station WCPO that he
was happy with the selection. He
said Shula will keep the same system in place.
"I can'ttell you how happy I
am lhat the same playbook is going
to be there for the offense," Esiason said. "And I think that's really
the key importance for us on
offense."

December 29, 1991

Security,.Safety, a
Guaranteed Income
for as long as you live .•.
That's an Annuity
the .

-

Earm/Business
.
•.
..-

1991: A year· worth forgetting in business
By JAMES M. KENNEDY
AP Business Editor
NEW YORK - From ffiM to GM to DCCI to
.JfK, it was ato~h year for big business.
How could thmgs get any worse than they were in
1990? Easy.
. International Business Machines Corp.
General Mol(lrs Corp., two of the nation's largest enterprises, announced painfuUy deep job cuiS lhat led a long
list of oorporate resttucturings.
Three major airlines died: Eastern, Midway and
Pan Am. Scandal erupted again, art a global scale,
with the undoing of the Bank of Cfedit and Commerce International.
Corporate America even took a blow from the
popular cultUre, which dredged up old. conspiracy
theories surrounding the assassination of President
Juhn F. Kennedy 28 years ago. "JFK," the new
movie by Oliver Stone, bla!nes the military-industrial ·
cbmplex, not Lee Harvey Oswald.
1991 was an anti-establishment year all the way
ar~nd. Behind much of the bad news was the sour
ecf:momy., which set the tone for everyone's year,
f~m the boardroom to the unemployment line.

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.CLEVELAND (AP)- Thrift
were more likely than
commercial banks to close inner
ci~ branches in the woke of deregulation, according to a study by the
Federal Reserve Bank.
:Federal Reserve research associate Robert Avery studied the numbei- of bank and thrift branches in
Cl,eveland, Detroit, Philadelphia,
Boston and Atlanta in 1977 before
deregulation and in 1989-90; --·
:"Thrift institutions have been

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Ottalily 1Im

Youngbloods in charge
Here's a list of the youngest
coaches in the modem era of the
NFL, including their age at the
time of their appointment:
l. David Shula, Bengals, 32 ·
years, 7 months.
2. Iohn Madden, Raiders, 32
years, 10 months.
3. Don Shula, Coits, 33.
4, Mike Shanahan, Raiders, 36.
5. Tom Landry, Cowboys, 36.
6. Chuck Noll, Steelers, 37.
7. Dan Reeves, Broncos, 37.
8. Les Steckel, Vikings, 38.
9. Ray Perlcins, Giants, 38.
10. Bill Belichick, Browns, 38.
11. Sam Wyche, Beng3ls, 39.
12. AJ Saunders, Chargers, 39.
13. Dick Vermeil Eagles, 39.

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To Save Athens Honda
Some Ta·xes!
·.

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS

Estimates written Immediately scheduling for the month of January.
Located next to lob Evans Farms,
Rio Grandt, Ohio.
FREE ESTIMATES •o all customers who
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Phone 245·9661
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·ATHENS HONDA ·CARS

THE HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE
Man.·Thurs. B·l
810 E. State St., Athens
Fri. I Sit. 9·6
614·594-8555
IIIII HHra:

Slrvlce Hlura:
Man.·Tbur. 8·1
Fri. I 81t. 9·6

The FTC said the 31,000 people
who placed one call each to the
com pany 's "900" number will
receive a full refund of $18 apiece.
Consumers who placed two or
more caDs will receive $34.54, the
agency said.
The agency said the company
agrec4 to pay the $1 million as a
form of "consumer redress" but
acknowledged no guilt.
agency.'s order al~_requires
beis.
' ":.~ ''"' ·
~ the com11any to disclose Ute cost of
:But the agency said the people calling any "900" number and to
looking for work were not told the tell consumers at the start they can
cails would cost $18 each.
avoid being charged by hanging up
Job seekers were told to leave a immediately.
message or send a stamped, selfTransworld Courier Services is
addressed envelope to obtain job also barred "from misrepresenting
information, but many received no any goods or services they offer in
responses, the agency said. ·
the future," thr FTC said.

....

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42,000 job seekers who
responded to an allegedly deceptive
telephone "jobs-line" offer will
sh~re $1 million in refunds, the
Fctderal Trade Commission said
Fnday.
:The FTC said callers responding
to:classified advertisements placed
Br$Und the country by Transworld
C4urier Services Inc. of Roswell,
Ga. were tol ,to caU "900" num-

:00.

Lettuce, melon prices up

earance

OFF

ied in the five ·metropolitan areas
had 12 percent more branch offices
at the end of the study period and
thrifts had 9 percent more.
While the number of thrift
branches increased 14 percent in
mostly white areas during the period, the number declined II percent
in black neighborhoods, the study
showed.
Avery said the likelihood that
thrifts would close inner city
branches may.be linked to the shutdown of overlap~ing offices in the
wake of acquisuions. "But this
does not explain why offices in
minority rather than low-income
areas were closed," he wrote.
While mostly black neightlorhoods in all five cities have "significantly fewer commercial bank
offices per capita" than white
areas, there has been little change
in the ratio since deregulation in
1977, Avery said.
Income and home values may
be more important factors in the
lower bank branch rate than race,
Avery said.
The cities were selected for the
study because they have mostly
segregated minority communities,
largely unrestricted banking markets and bank industries that have
been accused of discriminatory
practices in the past, Avery said.
Joan Pinkerton, a spokeswoman
for the 2,000-member U.S. League
of Savings Institutions representing
the thrift industry, said the Washington-based organization hadn't
seen the repOrt and could not comment
The league has named a committee to look into the issue of discriminatory practices in inner city
neighborhoods and also will look
into the issue of thrift services in
such areas, she said.
James E. Piettangelo, executive
vice president of the 79-branch
First Federal Savings Bank of
Cleveland, said the only branches
closed by his thrift since deregulation were competing neighborhood
outlets acquired in mergers. No
area was left withou~ a branch, he
said.
" We have more branches in
Cleveland now than prior to de regulation,". he said.

n ~arly

URGE SELECTION

"We're=~:~ .:~!!~!':~ow"?

more likely to close ott1ces m predominantly black (but not lowincome) neighborhoods during the
past 15 years ... Currently, thrifts
are less likely to be located in these
areas," Avery said in the bank's
quanerly "Economic Review."
Avery is a professor in the
Department of Consumer Economics and Housing at Cornell
University.
Overall, commercial banks stud-

•IWASHINGTON (AP)- The

11rt ,,.......,, la

Tampa Bay fires Williamson

Are you tired of hearing :..
"Maybe in February" or

MERGERS: A New Wave in Banks
Mergers, made famous by the mania of a past
decade, held out hope for some recession-weary businesses. Banks, although burdened with bad debts
from the bygone takeover era, were the most promi_.

Refunds set for job seekers
'Who sought help from 'jobs-line'

( ; tlltln l'llcitt
Rn•titt pl.sto

~----------------------------------------~ ·

= BODY SHOP NEWS =

.

The year wound down this past week much the
same way its predecessor expired - with falling
interest rates and sluggish Christmas salesreminders that the nagging economy was still not
responding to·treatrnent.
IBM and GM made the biggest news by announcing job cuiS in the tens of thousaods. What drove the
two industrial powers to. such measuies was the combination of a slow economy and relentless competition.
The list of companies that restructured - the
euphemism fot cutting jobs in 1991- was long and
full of household names, like Citicorp, Sears, Du
Pont, Westinghouse and American Express.
No amount of restructuring could help some, like
the airlines. Besides the recession, airlines were hit
by rising fuel prices and the fear of flying incited by
the crisis and war in the Persian Gulf.

nent new-wave players.
Manufacturers Hanover Trust Corp. was merged
into Chemical Banking Corp. NCNB Corp. and
C&amp;S-Sovran Corp. combined in NationsBank. A
combination of Security Pacific Corp. and
BankAinerica Corp. awaited federal approval,
A reform package! which might have aided some
banks by freeing them from Depression-era regulations, failed in Congress, makmg mergers all the
more important to banks' survival.
SCANDAL: Good Names Besmirched
Some names were sullied by the baQe of every
business year: scandal. BCCI, nicknamed the Bank
of Crooks and Criminals, was shut down by authorities in several countries in July after the inremational
bank dribbled financial poison around the world.
Created in 1972 to foster development 'in the
Third World, BCCI became a conduit for fraud,
money laundering and am\s trafficking.
In this country, the scandal was too abstract to
inspire much outtage from average Americans. But it
managed to ensnare two big powerbrokers in Washington, law parmers Clark Clifford and Robert Altman, who were suspected but never charged with

helping the bank gain a foothold in the United Slates. i .
By December, the story was mostly history as "
BCCI's liquidators agreed to tum over $550 million •
to settle U.S. raclceteering charges.
Scandal also returned to Wall Street, wliere
Salomon Brothers Inc. admiued cheating jn the government's Treasury auctions.
.
·
ECONOMY: Greenspan's Show
Congress and President Bush fielded many ·urgent ·~
caDs to fiX the economy, but their inaction rna4e it """
AJan GreenS{&gt;aR 's game .to win or lose. The Federal ~~
Reserve chauman engineered steady reductions in • ~
interest rates.
· ·
· The last move waS the biggt$1- a full-point drop . ;
in the rate charged by the Fed on loans to banks. The •
cut left the discount rate at a 27-year low and ignited ' ::
a yearend stock market rally.
· •J•.
Bush, whose re-election chances seemed imw- ·:: :
il~ by the economy, promised to present .a irQwth ~
plan of his own in January, In the meantime, he 'tried ":
to instiU confidence by venturing out to the inaU for a .!"'
post-Thanksgiving shopping trip.
.
After that, he pledged not to do "anything dumb" •,•
that would damage the economy further.

$tudy shows inner city thrift
branches closing after deregulation

.·

Co•puter Balance

1\

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•

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UATI rAIM

.

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•

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
But tomatoes and potatoes
whitefly infestation in California sho uld be in good supply and
and Arizona is pushing up retail priced moderately, he said.
prices on lettuce, melons, broccoli
Edwards said discounts can also
and cauliflower, economists say. be expected on avocados, brussels
But consumers should still find sprouts, celery, cucumbers and bell
hargains in the produce section this peppers. Relailers will also feature
winter.
yellow squash, carroiS, onions and
Dick Edwards, an economist sweet and white potatoes in Janwith the Texas Agricultural Exten- uary.
sion Service, said prices of head
Pears and apples should also be
lettuce will hover near the dollar good buys, while Chilean growers
mark and melons will cost about will provide U.S. consumers with
three times their normal price in plenuful suppties of grapes, peachJanuary. The whitefly has left es, plums, nectarines, raspberries
yields at only about 25 percent of and kiwis.
normal.
Edwards said prices on the
The whitefly is also driving up Chilean fruit would be lower and
the price of cauliflower, broccoli quality higher than las t year
and other leafy, green vegetables, because of more acreage and fewer
said Robert P. Jenkins, an weather problems.
economist with the Agricultural
Low beef and pork prices will
Extension Service at the University also continue in January, he said.
of Tennessee.

MYSTERY FARM -This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Gallia County. Individuals wishing to participate in the weekly contest may do so by guessing
the farm's owner. Just mail, or drop off your
guess off to the Daily Sentinel,lll Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 third Ave., Gampolis, Ohio, 45631,

U.S. farmland now has
fewest owners this century ·
WASHfNGTON (AP) - Nearly half of aU U.S. farmland is in the
hands of just 124,000 owners,
according to a new Agriculture
Department study that finds the
number of people who own farm land has shrunk to the lowest level
of the century.
As the number of farmland owners shrinks, the concentration of
ownership becomes of greater
interest because decisions about the
use of land and investment in
improvements, conservation and
resource quality are made by an
even smaller minority of the overall population, the report said.
The report by USDA's Economic Research Service also found that

WASHINGTON (AP) -The
nation's agricultural lenders are

;

seeing fewer credit-worthy farmers
and businesses as dismal economic
forecasts scare some borrowers
away from the bank and depressed
livestoCk prices squeeze others.
At the same time, the Farmers
Home Administration saw a slight
increase in the delinquency rate
among farm borrowers m 1991.
Some lenders and a farm-state
senator fear there could be more
sour loans on the books in 1992,
amid government predictions of
slipping farm incomes due to
increases in the costs of production
combined with steady commod1ty

Money Ide as

Governor George Voinovich. I am
pleased to be serving my area of
the state in this capacity."
Yoacham is the daughter of
Wiley and Audrey Ours of Racine.
She and her husband, Mark, are the
parents of three daughters: M~yla,
Camilla and Lena. The Yoachams
reside in Racine.

••

85% of American households
were in debt at some time
last year.
Average debt per U.S.
household nearly tripled in the
last decade.

::·: ·.: • Home mortgage debt totaled
.i •:.: $2.6trillion at the end of 1990.
,,,. • Total household debt in 1990
represented B3.5 percent of
dispOsable personal income.

So.,..: Amlricon S.nkftl Auoc•IOn: Amfricttn llonl&lt;nf&gt;tcr
. ,._;Nition.IIF..-IionlotC-Credor

A!'!Brian Garrigan

By STAN EVANS
GALLIPOLIS - Federal Reserve
Cuts Discount Rate Decidedly to 3.5
From 4.5% - Increased Unemployment Claims Indicate Economy
Remains Soft Investors Continue to Lengthen
Maturities
Last week,
Federal Reserve
Chairman Greenspan testified to
Co,ngress that the
ceonom y remains weak.
Thursdays's announcement that
initial unemploymeht claims continue to rise at rates above expectation's underscored the chairman's
concerns. As a result, the Federal
Reserve lowered the Discount Rate
by one full percentage point to 3.5%.
The last time the DiscOunt Rate was
at 3.5% was the summer of 1963.
lately ,the Federal Reserve has taken
a more aggressive monetary policy

.•

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•

•

4 percent of the 10181, held 47 percent of the · land. And owners
whose holdings contained less than
50 acres accounted for 30 percent
of the total but held only 2 percent
of the acreage.
The report also said that of the
total owners, 44 percent were nonoperators who held 41 perce.nt of
the land.
''The century began with more
operators (including renters) than
owners, and is ending with subslantially more owne1s than operators," the study said. "Compared
with owners and operators, the
amount of land in farms, which
peaked in the 1950s, has changed
litOc. "

,.

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receipts.
"The increase in the percentage ''
of FmHA delinquencies and the
drop in the number cif credit-war- '::,
thy borrowers in 1991 ate a trou- · •; ·
blesome omen for the year ahead," •
says Sen. Tom Daschle, D-S .D. "
"Indications are 1992 will be
worse for the farm economy than " ·
recent years."
Jay T. Godwin of the American
Bankers Association said farm-sector borrowers were hurt this year
by reductions in government farm
payments, severely eroded cattle
and pork prices, and pockets of natural disasters.
..
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Market comments

·; •
!
·': :. :
'; ' •
:: :'
,.:::.: ·

NANCYYOACHAM

many current owners have little
direct role in operating the nation 's
2 million farms and ranches.
"That means that decisions concerning larger operations are being
made by fewer farmers and fewer,
but proportionately more, nonfarmer landowners," the report
said. "The~ changes in the structure of farmland ownership parallel
the enlargement of farm size.
reduction in farm numbers and
reduction in farm employment."
The report said a 1989 survey of
farm ownership estimated that by
the end of 1988, there were 2.95
million people who owned 833
million acres of private farmland.
But roughly 124,000 owners, or

Nation's farm lenders seeing
fewer .credit-worthy borrowers

Nancy Yoacham,. Racine,
named Division 10 PIO
RACINE - Ohio Department of
Transporlation District 10 Deputy
Director John Dowler has
announced that Racine native
Nancy Yoac.ham has been hired as
District IO's Public Information
Officer. Yoacham will begin her
duties in Marietta on January 13.
Dowler made the announcement
at a press conference in Pomeroy
on Friday.
Yoacham was a reponer for The
Daily Sentinel for six years. She
left that position in 1990 to become
news editor for the Jackson Star
News in Ravenswood and Ripley,
W.Va.
During her employment with the
Jackson Star News, Yoacham
received several West Virginia
Press Association awards, including a first place award for news
reporting. For the past year,
Yoacham has been employed by
the Meigs County Department of
Human Services, Children Services
Division.
"I'm looking forward to my new
job," Yoacham said. "I believe !hat
many good things, especially with
regard to transportation, will pe
happening in Southeastern Ohio
dutmg the ne_xt few years under

and you may 'win a $5 prize from lbe Ohio Valley Publishing ·Co. Leave your name, address
. and telephone number with your eard or letter.
No telephone calls will be accepted. All contest
entries should be turned in to the newspaper
office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case or a tie,
the winner will be chosen by lottery. Next week,
a Meigs County farm will be featured by the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District.

stance to stimulate the economy
because Congress is largely unable
to implement a fiscal stimulus pack- .
age due to the size of the budget
deficit.
As a ·result of !he Federal Re- ·
serves move to lower short term rates,
the long bond market again reached·
new hi ghs. Rates arc approaching ' ' ·
ourtargetof7.5%.Giventhecwrent ., '
spread between short term money ' 1
rates and long term rates, we continue to expect investors to IC!Jilben
the 'maturities 'of their fiXed income '"
holdings. Given thecurrentlow level
of inflation, and the liketihood it will
trend lower, the long term bond
market remains an attractive investment opportunity.
·STOCKS: -Utility Stocks Respond Positively To Federal Reserve
Cut of Discount Rate -Market
Response To Cut Was Questioned
At First; Positive Later -'Small G1!f
Stocks Will ·Continue to Domina
Continued on D-8
I
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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Page-02-Sunday Times-Sentinel

December 29, 1991

December 29,1991 ~:

years.
.
. .
lion at risk? "W~ will tal::e a w~tIf they don't, S8ld commiSSion and-see
atlltude,''
$Bid
spokesman Stephen Davidow, "It spokeswoman Vicki Smink.
coul_d adversely affectlheir accredWhile no one disputes lhe physn~uon" -which means their ical heallh benefits of snuffmg out
reimbursements from Medicare and cigarettes. doctors who run drugother insurance could be affecled, treatment programs and psychiatric
along with their state licensing, units wony about the impact going
bond ratings. and their ability to smoke-free will have on their
attract staff.
patients' mental health.
Still, some hospitals are balking.
·'You certainly could say one
Pennsylvania's Department of Pub- has to be concerned about whether
lie Welfare has said it will not ban this is a good thing to do wilh psysmoking at its 13 accrediled state chiatric patients," said Dr. Alexan·psychiatric hospitals. It's unfair to der Glassman, a Columbia Univerpatients who are involuntarily hos- sity psychiatrist whose research has
pi tali zed or face long stays, offi- shown the connection between
cials say.
smoking and depression.

N;;; ;;~;in~;P;;(;dts;; ;;;-fi;;;tricpatien~

I

1~e

And ~nlike irritability~ depression
Fifty percent of psychiatric :
rna~ linger long after_w1thdrawal. · patients smoke, studies show, com- .
'Nobody stays a more irritable , pared with 30 percent .of the gener- .
person because they quit smok- Iii population. Hughes said.
••
mg," Glassman said. "That isn't
Some
80
percent
of
so clear wilh depression. Most peo- schizophrenics and manic-depresple get through it. But some do sive patients smoke, and
not."
schizophrenics inhale two to three
· How many? Nobody knows.
times more nicotine than normal
. "We don't have a lot of smokers do, he said, although 11\e .
research on tobacco withdrawal in reason is unclear.
·
psychiatric patients, panly becalise
Recent studies at seven Nashua, .
no_t a lot of psychiatric patients N.H.-area hospitals of teen-agers :
quit," said Dr. John Hughes, a psy- showed smoking among almost'
chiatrist at University of Vermont . 100 percent of those admit!ed fot ·
in Burlington who studies nicotine drug or alcohol treatment and 70
and caffeine dependency.
· percent of psychiatric patients. .
' ·

.

MANILA, Philippines (AP) After a horrific year of economic
crisis, volcanic eruption and a devastating flood, this turbulent country is looking forward to its first
peaceful transfer of power in more
than a generation.
President Corazon Aquino 's
successor will be chosen in national elections on May II and take
office June 30. She has pledged not
to seek another 1erm.
If she keeps that promise, it will
be the first peaceful transfer of
power since Ferdinand Marcos
defeated President Diosdado Macapagal in November 1965.

. Marcos was driven from power.
10 February 1986 in an uprising
that installed Mrs. Aquino.
But the prospect of national
elections next May has generated
linle optimism for the Philippine
democracy. Instead, Filipino and
Western analysts fear a crowded
presidential field may produce a
new administration without a firm
mandate.
"Philippine democracy is in
deep trouble,'' commentator
Amanda Doronila wrote in The
Manila Chronicle. "The Philippines stands as a likely candidate
for the reversal of the worldwide

IRS may owe you money

j

CINCINNATI -The Internal dreds of Ohio taxpayers nave not
Revenue Service wants to give received lheir 1990 refunds.
Some unclaimed refunds date
money to more than 1,100 Ohio
residents, including three from the back even further.
If you were due a refund and
Gallipolis area, but cannot locate
believe you have not received it,
them.
Sam E. Robinson, Melanie A. call the lRS at 1-800-829-1040 to
Black and Ladonna L. Van Hoose claim it. Callers should be ready to
of the Gallipolis area are listed on a provide their name, Social Security
recent undelivered refund li st nijmber, address listed on the return
and the amount of expecled return.
recently published by the lRS.
Dixon offered three tips to avoid
" You or a family member may
be on this list," said IRS an undeliverable refund in future
spokeswoman Teri Dixon. The list years:
First, notify the IRS of any
of 1,101 names represen~ returned
tax refund check which the postal address changes by filing IRS
Form 8822.
service could not deliver.
Second, use the peel-off la&amp;el on
The undelivered refund checks
exceed $348,600 and vary from $I your tax package to ensure the
address on the return is legible.
to $9,370.
"Many taxpayers move or
Third, have your refund check
change their name and don't notify directly deposiled into your bank
the IRS," Dixon said, "or, some- acc ount by filing your tax return
times the handwriting on the tax electronically with the lRS.
return is unclear." As a result, hun-

.

smoke more

(democratic) trend."
Six months before the election,
it is unclear who is likely to succeed Mrs. Aq~ino . At least 10
politicians, including Marcos'
widow Imelda, have indicated they
may run. Few, however, have generated muc h enthusiasm in an
increasingly disgruntled electorale.
The candidale who fares best in
opinion surveys, former Agrarian
Reform Secretary Miriam Defensor
Santiago, is generally dismissed by
professional politicians because she
lacks a formidable machine capable
of delivering votes.
Without a provision for a runoff,
the winner could assume office
with the support of less than onethird of the electorate.
Disgruntlement runs so deep
that many Filipinos speak wistfully
of the need for a "benevolent"
strongman, such as Singapore's
Lee Kwan Yew, to put order and
efficiency in government.
Others are ·calling for replacing
the bicameral, U.S.-style presidential system, which Mrs. Aquino
restored, with a parliamentary government similar to one Marcos
installed during martial law.
Efforts to establish a stable
democratic system have been
inhibited by the absence of a strong
political party system. Some 124
political parties are registered with
the Commission on Elections,
mostly or~anized around prominent
personalines.
Politicians who fail to win the
nomination of a major party can
simply leave established organizations and organize lheir own parties.

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Utnaday.
446-3636vA~
HOMES FARMS &amp; COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
25_LOCUST STREET GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

.

.

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AUDREY F. CANADAY, BROKER
LINDA G. BKJDMORE
MARY-~ IILOYD
REALTOR 379-2886

REALTOR 446-3383

NICE TO COME HOME TOI BRICK RANCH, HAS 3
BEDROOMS WITH LOTS OF CLOSET SPACE. WALK·
IN CLOSET OFF MASTER BEDROOM, 2 BATHS,
LARGE LIVING AND DINING ROOMS, KITCHEN HAS
LARQE SNACK BAR. DINING AREA OPENS ONTO
COVERED WOOD DECK WITH BUILT ~N SEATING. 2
CAR ATTACHED GARAGE, FULL BASEMENT. HEAT·PUMP. APPROX . 10 ACRES, BARN, OTHER
OUTBUILDINGS, CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT. SUPER
NICE PROPERTY!

DEBBY DRIVE - 3
LARGE KITCHEN,
WOODWORK. FULL
WITH SPACE FOR
FAMILY ROOM. 2 CAR GARAGE, CENTRAL AIR
COND.I $73,500. DON'T MISS SEEING THIS HOMEI

YEARNING FOR A BEAUTIFUL OLD HOME TO
RESTORE? LET US .TAKE YOU ON ATOUR OF THIS
BEAUTY. FRONT ENTRY HAS BRIDAL STAIRCASE,
REAR ENTRY HAS AWINDING 3 STORY STAIRWAY
THAT TAKES YOU TO WHAT ONCE WAS THE
SERVANTS QUARTERS ON THE THIRD FLOOR.
THERE IS A BALlROOM WITH MARBLE FIREPLACES,
LIVING ROOM AND ENORMOUS DINING ROOM ,
KITCHEN AND STUDY ON THE FIRST FLOOR. SEVEN
BEDROOMS ON THE SECOND. MUCH, MUCH MORE.
YOU WILL NAVE TO MAKE AN APPOINTMENT TO SEE
ALLOFTHISHOME. ONLY $72,000.

...

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--.J.-

.;;

COUNlRY ESTATE: GIVE YOUR FAMILY THE
PRIVACY THEY DESERVE! 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS,
FAMILY ROOM, PLUS RECREATION ROOM, LOVELY
FORMAL LIVING RCOM WITH FIREPLACE, EQUI~PED
KITCHEN. FORMAL DINING ROOM, REAR DECK,
SECOND FLOOR BALCONY. ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP,
NATURAL REDWOOD EXTERIOR, 2 CAR ATTACHED·
GARAGE. SURROUNDED BY 9 BEAUTIFUL WOODED
ACRES. SHOWN BY APPO[NTMENT. $125,000.
f!_CX&gt;MS PLUS BATH . NICE:

.,

l
-~

RESIDENCE AND MOBIL£ HOMEPAAK- VERY NICE
4 BEDROOM, 2 BATH COUNTRY HOME ON APPRDX.
23 ACES. BACK PORCHES. 2 CAR GARAGE. 8
MOBILE HOME LOTS WITH MOBILE HOME'5 AND 5
MOBILE LOTS. ALL PRESENTLY F.ENTED.
EXCELLENT LOCATION. CALL FOR COMPLETE
DETAILS.
RACCOON· ROAD - 39 ACRES, MOSTLY WOODED.
WATER TAP. 2 SEPTIC TANKS. ONE TRAILER SITE
PRESENTLY RENTED. $20,000.
11,5011. NICE WOODED LOT WITH BUILDING., WOULD
MAKE EXCELLENT HUNTING CABIN.

don't justify the release of convicted violent felons.
"It's just not worth the risk. It's
not fair to the public," he said.
The commissioners, struggling
with a projected $3.5 million
deficit, told Mahony on Dec. 11 to
expect to receive about $4.2 million to run his department in 1992.
Layoff notices were sent to 37
employees, including 13 corrections officers, for the department to
operale within its projected budget,
Mahony said.
Mat:or.y ~·l•s told on Thursday
that he W()nl.1 have an additional
$300,0W.
But the department still was
$350,000 short of keeping the jail

'

at its current operating level and·"
another $350,000 for maintaining .
road patrOls, he said.
.•
Mahony requested the cap ··
reduction because the jail could not';'
be safely run at i~ present capacity: ; ·
"With the layoff of 13 correj:::-.;
lion officers, I cannot operate th! ;:
present facility at a reasonable safe ,.
level with minimum standards," he ~
told the judges. "The majority of ·.,;
my time for the past year has been :·~
spent deciding what lawbreaker
will be released."
.
. •~
" I think the ruling said that it's
the commissioners' duty to come • •
up with the money to nin the jail/~ ;~
said Lorain County Prosecutor Gre• •
gory While. "The $350,000 has to ·
come from somewhere."

141 IECOND AVENUE IN OALUPOUS - 2 STORY
VIC'!ORIAN STYLE HOME PRESENTLY USED AS A4
UNIT RENTAL WOULD MAKE LOVElY ONE FAMILY
RESIDENCE. $48,000.
LOOK AND COMPARE! I BEDRQOMS. 2 BATHS,

.

Announcements

Box 1043, Galllpol~, Ohlo 45631.

CONVENIENT LOCATION JUST OFF RT. 35. THIS
HOME IS ABARGAIN AT $58,000.
NEAR HOLZER HOSPITAL - SPLIT FOYER DESIGN.
HAS 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, LARGE LIVING AND
DINING AREA, EQUIPPED KITCHEN WITH SNACK
BAR, FIRE AND SECURITY SYSTEM. GAS FORCED
AIR FURNACE, CENTRAL AIR COND. 2 CAR
BASEMENT GARAGE. teS,OOO.

Puzzle Answer on Page C-5

pupploo ond mothor, mix
wko old, culo ond lov·

t worship '
6 Moccasins
10 Ginger cookie
14 Appears
19 Disprove
21 River duck
22 Vast ages
23 Semi-precious
stone '
24 Losses
26 Flowed off
accidentally
28 Dispute angr;;y
29 Unlock: poetic
30 Pit
32 Incantation

33 Indigent
34 Avenging spirit
35 Rockfish
37 Back of neck
39 Dance step
40 Farm implement
41 Matured
42 lnv. response
44 Tilled
46 - of approval
47 Winter vehicle
48 Congers
50 In a proper
manner

52 Invoice word
53- . J,K.-, M
55 Speed contest
57 Yes, to Pablo
58- beer
59 Swift
60 Ed.'s concern
62 Knock
54 Ripped
68 Neon symbol
68 "Evening Shade"
star: inlts.
69 Spout
70 Chinese pagoda
71 Capital of the
Ukraine
73 Daze: stupor
75 Rumor
77 Emerald Isle
78 Reprocessing
metal
80 Willow
81 Bother
82 Capturing by
stratagem
84 Smooth; facile

assassins

103 Withered
104 Limb
105 Journey
106 Greek letter
107 Babylonian deity
108 Sp. women
110 Inlet
111 "- the People"
112 Cuts the grass
113 Temporary beds
115 That thing
117 Pitcher
119 Spanish article
120 Hauls
121 Owns
124 Leak through
126 Mend with cotton
127 Broadway's
Tommy
128 Robs
130 Challenge
132 Coin
133 Skeleton part
134 Schad. abbr.
135 District in
London
137 Shut up
139 Inquire
140 Beer Ingredient
141 Irishmen
143 Country of Africa
145 Hint
146 Bruce Willis film
148 Conlllcfs
150 Omelet variety
152 Mistakes
153 Regulation
154. Hearing organs
)56 Avoids
157 Trials
158 Arabian seaport
159 Lettau
160 Fat
DOWN
1 Enthusiasm
2 More profound
3 Assault

8 Tooth crowns

9 Footwear
10 Trades for money
11 Christmas carol
12 In addition
13 Postscript: abbr.
14 District in
Germany
15 Sea eagle
16 Betrothed
11 Llquelied
1,8 Spirited horse
20 Kind of collar
23 Develop
25 Narrow, flat
board
27 Conductor
28 Pull the - over
someone's eyes
31 Heroic event
33 Frolic
36 Declare
38 Epic poetry
40 Animal's coat
41 Landed
43 Real estate map
45 Nobleman
46 Laid away
47 Band worn
around waist
49 Highlander
51 ~tallone film
52 Fastened wllh
glue
53 Angers
54 Secular
56 Incorrect
59 Necessary
equipment
60 Principal
61 Warbled
63 Act
65 Orient
67 Without end :
poetic
69 Proceed
70 Horse of Roy
Rogers
72 Marketable price
74 Nickel symbol
76 Italian river
77 Small heating
vessels

able, 614-949-2471

Fntt cats! 814..g92..e&amp;86
Malto, black, Lab miJad
II wko. old, 614-1192-5071

79 British tavern
83 Sesame
85 Joints
86 Academic
subjects
87 Unfreeze
88 Steak order
89 Near
90 Rest
91 Prepares for
print
92 Lincoln nickname
93 Laud
94 Gold symbol
96 Great Lake
97 Actual
100 Alternative
word
102 Proverb~
105 Village
109 Sow
112 Walker of "Beetle
Bailey" tame
113 Fruit of the
pine
114 Last six lines
of a sonnet
116 Afternoon parties
118 Harvest
120 Oil-carrying
vessels
121 Football kick
122 Bogged down
123 Narrow opening
125 Go before
126 Fond wish
127 Narrated
129 Presentation
131 Habituates
132 Military student
133 Prohibits
134 Consumed
t:l6 S-shaped
molding
138 Taut
140 Defaces
141 Strong wind
142 Scorch
144 Norway's capital
147 Torrid
148 An AbbOtt
149 Theater sign:
abbr.
151 Vat
t53 Sun god
155 Pickens 10

puppy,

Medium Size Dog To Olvoowoy,

Long Hair, Tan And Brawn, Poa-

slbly A Crooo BllwHn Colllo
And Chow. 614-446-alSt
Small female dog, Wit houM

---

dog, can be '"" al 1e77 Un·
cafn Hgts, Pomaroy
-- ~

.

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a1ely af1er the crash that icing was
probably not a problem because the
flight was delayed for 18 minutes
for the automatic spraying of an
anti -icing liquid.
The Danish pilot, Stefan Rasmussen, said at a news conference
Friday evening that mechanics told
him'the plane had been de-iced.

more than a mile from where the
plane carne down.
He s·a id S AS, owned by the
Swedish, Danisllan'li"Norwegian
governments, had been notified of
the preliminary findings and had
already made changes to tighlen its
de-icing procedures.
SAS officials had said immedi-

The hard-line Communist state
also stated that it would qot possess
facilities for enriching uranililll, a
promise seen as indicating that it
would abandon suspected plans to
make nuclear weapons.
Experts believe that North
Korea, one of the world 's few
remaining Stalinist regimes, has the
ability to manufacture nuclear
weapons in a few years.
The proposed no-nuclear declaration, along with the Dec. 13 ri:conciliation accord, would greatly
help promote peace on the tense
Korean peninsula, the last thealer
of Cold War confrontation.
Seoul officials want North
Korea to sign the safeguards agreement with the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency
and allow neutral inspections by
Jan . 15.
The officials said if North Korea
fails to comply with the South
Korean demand, the 1992 joint
U.S.-South Korea military exercises would be held as scheduled.

6

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

PubliC Notice

9

Public Notice

PubliC Notice

Public Notice

poaal Conferonce.
and proctdurea.
A Pre-Propooal Confir· lnlereoled partleo an oppor·
The approved appliC41nl
All contractual llt!'VIcoo will once will ba conducted on tunlty to ,.IN quHllonl,
will provide defined aervlc01 ba funded through appro·' Januory a, 1992, •• g:30 o.m. clarify laaun, and dl1cuaa
for lndlvldualt who have prlallono made by ODMRIDD at the Board otflceo, Guid- concern a.
mental retardaUon•ndlor de- IC the Golllo County Board of Ing Hond School, Clteohlre,
velopmental dlubllltleo. The MR/DD.
Ohio 45620 In ordtr to allow Deactf!lbar 15, 22, 21, 161
reoullanl contract will ba In
Januory 5, 1992
existence fort Umeporlod of
approxlmately8(olx)monlha
ANSWERS TO M:\1.4}lw\-4\'.~S •1-2q
(unlll June 30, 1!182). Attht
concluolon of Mch y•r tha
The lellow was amazed that most
contract will ba rii'IOGollttod
FATHER
ol the people didn't know the punch
baoed on lht rMoontbla and
proJected noedo of tha lndl·
STOLID
lines to most of the jokes he was telvldualo baing Mrvad, 11QUARTZ
ling. Finally he heard someone say
ao the quollty of ttrvlceo
CHOICE
that lhe nice thing about telling a
baing provided (Ohio ReWALKER
clean joke is that there's a good
vlotd Ccidt 5128. 44).
The oucceuful tppllcant
VERBAL
chance no one has HEARD it
will be expected to cooporHEARD
II
BEFORE
BEFORE.
ale In all applicable pollcttl

Lost &amp; Found
Real Estate General

Ftmalt BIIGII lost Wlldlift
MeCIIntoeh lirea. Rtwardt Call

Real EB1ate General

Real Estate General

Coltoc:t. 304-129-7276.

Lost: 2 redbone Coonhound• In

tht Ktnof Mt OUiit arn, 614992-e623

Lost: malt, Slblrian Huaky, 1

blue tyt 1 brown ,eye, very

l!)ondly, C:,.w rd. oroo, 114·627168

' .

..

Lost: Ring ot ktyl, IOmtwhtrt
around Vaughan'• pilrklnglot In
Mlddlaport or lower end of Mid·
dleport, reward, 614-742·26i4

LOS'I'

l

MON., DEC. 23, '91
Gold Bracelet lost
at the Ariel Theatre
or on the street In
front, or In the
parking lot Hill's or
Inside Hill's. Please
contact If found.
949-2881 or

'

1-304-n3-5349

.j
I
• I

I

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7

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EOE

r.e1u Know I The Place To Call

Real Estate General ·

OFFICE 992·2886

ALL Yard Soloo Mull Bo Pold In
Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. .

tile day beforw lht ad 11 to run.
Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m.

INTOWNI
Stlle11 relocating and must sel this older 2
story homo. 3 bedrooms. nicely carpeted
throughout. Vinylsicing, gas foreod air lumace
.,;th central air. Low maintenance, garage. OH
stNel parl&lt;ing. Exceptional value. Call today!
Prioed in lho $40s.
12938

Friday. Monday edlllon - 2:00

1 Card of Tllanka
Thank You Marvin
&amp; Marjorie for
making my dream
come truel You are
the bestl
Maxine
- 1
. !

.

.H

. .. ''

:. . I

.. "'
: ~ :: I'

:_;I
:.~·~
. , ,.
.,

.. '

... •

J

.

't. •I
' •• !
~. ~

t

....... t

.. .. I
I

_~;
'
~; t

."'•••.
.
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I
.. I

-

·Tammie DeWitt
4411-8006 . • . 446-6624

Yard Sale

p.m. Salurday.

t!J''
•
1• , '

NICE, COZ'f HOllE. 1. BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, NICE
DINING AREA OFF KITCHEN, (.ARGE LIVING ROOM
WITH FIREPLACE, OVER AN · ACRE LAWN.
EXCELLENT BUY AT $40,000.

Giveaway

4
~reed, 8

4 Regret
5 Greenland
se!Uemenl
6 Liquid meas.
7 DOE opponent

Stockholm. In wltat some called a
miracle, most of those aboard
walked away from the wreckage;
42 were injured, several seriously.
Forssberg said the engines still
must be studied in a repair shop.
But he said investigators at the site
had found damage to both engines,
with some engine parts scattered

where tbe plane crashed three minutes after
takeotr. All 129 on board survived. (AP Laserphoto).
·

Wanted to Buy
Public Notice
Top Prien Poid: All Old U.S. ment, and provlolon of ldon·
"'Rt-:ck-:P:-01-,_,--:Au-c""tl-on'""c""o_m_pa_n-y,l Coins, Gold Ringe, Sllvlr Colna, ll(lod
oupported living Hrv·
Gold Colno. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
full time auctlonMr, complete 151 S.Coni:f Avenue, Gallipolis. · Ices for lndlvldualo preauction •rvfct. LlctnHd Ohio,
sented herein. Sealed proWHI Ylrglnll, 304-7'13·5785.
pooals will barecelvod atlhe
W.clemtytr'• Auction Strvlct,
Public Notice
Board CHico, Guiding Hand
Rio Orondo, Ohio 614-245-5152. - - - - - - - - - Schoof, ChHhlre, Ohio unlit
1:00 p.m. Eutern Standard
9 Wanted to Buy · .
A REQUEST FOR
Time (EST) on January 15,
PROPOSALS
1992. Opening of bldo will
Complete Houllhold Or Eafollow lmmodltttly.
lalaal Any Ty,- Of Furniture,
Applloncn, Anllquo'o, Etc. Aloo Tho Golllo County Board lndlvldualo needing aorvApprolul Avollablol 614-245- of Mento! Retardotlon ond lcea for thlo propooal will re:::51=52::..-:---:---:-,-.,-,-I Developmental Dlubllhltllo quire varying ,.nge of opWonlod to buy, Slondlng tlmbor, accepting propoul• from tion• and will pooHu a wide
Bob Williams &amp; Sana 614·992· lndlvlduale or agtnclea for range of abiiiUu •• con·
_s4_49_._ _ _ _ _ _ _ the coordination, manage- tal ned within their Individual
1
servlee protllea. Theio proflloo are available to potential appllcanlo tor purposes
Help wanted
of review during tha Pre-Pro·

8

3 Announcements
Moel ArN Slngloo By Chalco
Not Chlneo. Wrftt: Slnglta, P.O.

3'

86 Helping
87 "The - with
Angels"
89 Exist
92 Separate
95 Kind of beer
98 Rabbit
99 KICked
101 One of Caesar's

ALL SURVIVED- Tbe bulk of a SAS MD80 airliner Des broken In three parts in a fie.ld
· north or Arlanda Airport in Sweden Friday,

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) South and North Korean delegates
Saturday failed to reach a nuclear
non-P.roliferation accord for their
heavily armed peninsula but agreed
to meet again next week, officials
said.
Two delegates and three nuclear
experts from each side met for two
hours at the border village of Panmunjom to discuss the nuclear disputes that thre3ten to scultle a historic 16-day-old reconciliation
accord.
They agreed to meet again Tuesday, said officials of the government's National Unification Board.
Details of the meeting were not
immediately available. It was the
second inter-Kores nuclear meeting
in three days.
· A breakthrough was made in the
issue Thursday when North Korea,
in a surprise move, promised to
sign a sl\feguards agreement and
open its nuclear facilities to inlernational inspections "at the earliest
possible day."

&gt;

'

w,r:N~We~LKl1~~E~~Ncl~G~AMd~YRR~~~~~

ByEVAJANZON
Associated Press Writer
:,STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP)
~ Government investigators said
Saturday that shaltered ice may
haye caused an engine failure that
forced an SAS jetliner to crashland with 129 people aboard No
· Qrte was killed in the crash, ·
.The Civ~l A~iation Authority
team mvesugaung Friday's crash
also said a mechanic hadn't foll_owed established rules for checkm~ •ce on the wings, because he '
faded 10 feel the wings with his
hand for invisible ice layers.
"Ice could have broken loose
and been sucked into the engines
This cannot be excluded," Olof
Forssbe~g, head of the investigation
team, sa1d at a news conference.
:The aircraft, bound for Copenhagen, Denmark and Warsaw
Poland, crashed into a snowy field
th\-ee minutes after takeoff from
Mlanda airpon, 28 miles north of

J

.• w

IIIXTY ACRE FARM - RECENTLY REMODELED Ill
STORY HOME. HAS VINYL SIDING, 3 BEDROOMS, 2
BATHS. DINING ROOM. MODERN KITCHEN HAS
CUSTOM BUILT OAK CABINETS. FENCED PASTURE
IS PERFECT FOR HORSES OR CATTLE. BARN,
·STORAGE BlDG. CELLAR_HOUSE. $52,000.

may be

• The Area's Number 1 M~rketplace

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS

Two Koreas to {ry again ·
to reach nuclear accord .

.

.

.

'

EL YR1A, Ohio· (AP) - A ruling by. four Lorain County Common Pleas judges will keep violent
felons in jail by increasing the f'roposed 1992 budget for the shenff's
department.
Sheriff Martin Mahony had
requested the inmate cap at lhe jail
10 be reduced to 84 from 166 after
the county commissioners allocaled
about $1 million less than the
department needed,.he said.
Judges Edward Zaleski, Floyd
Harris, Lynett McGough and
Kosma Glavas ruled Friday that the
commissioners find the money to
keep the jail running at its current
level.
Zaleski said financial shortfalls

•'

crash cause-

Judges order funding
..
peaceful power transfer in generation raised, prisoners remain Jailed ·. ·

I

I

and QUJt less. Studies h~ve shown
that p~ople wuh a hutory of .
depress1on are more than ~0 ~rc~nt less likely to succeed. m qwttmg and are far more hkely to
b~ome depressed when they do
qu11. . . . . .
. Unlike ~lability, depression is
an exceedmgly rare symptom of
tobacco. withdrawal; in the general
pojJUiauon, only I0 percent to 15
percen! of people ex~erience
depressiOn when they qu11 smokmg.
.
But Glassm~ found that among
people With a history of depress1on,
80 percent became depressed when
they tried to give up cigarettes.

.

Sunday Tlm8s-sentlnet
0

Shattered
.

Smoke-free life might be ~luer on~ for some hospital patients :·:~
By LISA LEVITT RYCKMAN
AP National Writer
NEW YORK - Giving up
cigareues is tough for lhe weak of
will, and virtually impossible for
the emotional wreck.
But5,000 U.S. hospitals, including 560 psychiatric institutions, are
under orders from the nation's
major health-care accrediting body
to begin imposing smoking bans·
~n
. 1.
1
The Joint Commission on the
Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations has not ruled the ban
must start Jan. 1 - insiitutions
must only restrict smoking to des- ·
ignated areas, and have a plan in

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolla, OH-Polnt PltaNnt, wv

Tho lamllv of Chuloo
C. ("Mouoa") Hotfmll'l
gratofullv acknowledge
all of their family and
trlanda tor the prayaro,
food, ftowara and carda
of aupport during lha 11nall 1111d death of our
loved one.
Every-·• aupporl
w• deeply appraclattd.
A vary apaclll "Thank·
You" to And&gt;/ MIIM, mintoter of the Pomeroy
Church of Chrlat, Tha
Pomaroy Church of
Chrlat, Mr. and Mra .
Willard Boyar, Mra .
Mildred Woh, 11'1d a.tty
Frulor. Warda oannol
axpreu how apaalll you
all ara. Thank you to
avaryona. God Blou
you all.
Wife, Martha F. Holfmlft
Son and Dllllghtar~n- .
t.w,G-gaA.
and J0111 A. Hollman;
Dat9llw and Son-In·
..... lllold L. 11'1d Devld
B. Owono; Foatar Son
Sgl Raymond E. Rldw,
Grlllclohldrll'l, Llu D.
Rldlr, 'lllmmy 8. Bhoala,
and BryanT. Holtman.

.

205 North Second Ave.
Mlddltporl, OH

.

EAGLE RIDGE ROAO- Approx. 7 acres of vacant
ground. Moat ia hay land and has a great building sita.
Walor and electric is ava~abla. Owner will finance .,;1h a
reasonable down payment.
$10,500
DARWIN- Fann- Approx. 151 acres of land with older 2
aloiY homa. Has six rooms. 3 bedrooms. 2 bems, and
f11o gao to heat your homo. Approx. 20 acres tillablo.
$70,000.
EAGLE RIDGE - Approx. 40 acres of land, of which
about 20 acn~o ""' tfllablo. Has a bam with hay loft and
an equipment shtd. Pubic water and electric availablo.
Many great building siteo and water for animals.

$30,0oo

RACINE - Famllv NHdod- For lhio 1II aiO·IY· 3·4 bodroom homo ..;th 4 poreheo, halt besomont, dining room,
family room, and a small oulbuidiilg. Good siztd lot.
$28,500'
EAGLE RIDGE ROAD - Aboautilul comer lot ..;th a
Pond, tree natural gaa, worl&lt;shop or garage with a 5 bey
equipment shecl. Hao eleclnc In worf&lt;shop and public·
water 11 available. This approx. 10 aero parcel has a
beautiful building silo ovorlooking the Pond.
$30,000
MIDDLEPORT- Paarl Slraal- Anice 2 story home wilh
3 bedrooms, 1l\ baths, vinyl siding, new windows, full
baoement. House is on a Good Street. Price was
S3i,900.
NOW $37,000
ROUTE 124 - Have you ev.r draamed of owning your
own buolntll- Welt, now's the time 1o buy. This buslnesa
io eq~lpped with ahakt machine, 4 freeztno, IC41 cream
· machlne, deep fryer, IC41 machine, gril and loll more.
Silting on approx. one &amp;ell comer lol along a slat. rout&amp;.
ONLY $60,5011
MIDDLEPORT- Hlah Sl.- ilred of starehlng lhroultl
lhe newt~r? Welf, aaareh no turthlr. Thlo 3 btidroom
hOUII hat cenlrll air, lAnnox puiM G.F.A. fumaee, 1 car·
garage, equipped kitchen. privacy fll'lcaln btlckyard, and
a baltlllonl DON'T LET IT PASS YOU BY.
S31,100
DOTTIE TURNER, Broktr ......................... :....... 182-5682
BAEtrmA JEFFERS............................................182:-3056
DAALWE STEWART..- ................................... 112:-6365

BANDY BUTCHEA............................................. II2~537t

SHERYL WALYERI. ............................... ,,......... 387..o421

OWNER MUST SELLII
You must make an appointment lo sea this
nice 3 bedroom home located In the heart of
Crown City. Above-ground pool with nice deck
area. Priced In lho $40's.
12934
$5,500.00
VIEW OF THE RIVER
Wilh lhis 8+ tract of land. Wooded. Sita cleared
for mobile home or house·. Rural water and

electric available. Along SR 7.

JUST IN TIME FOR
HUNTING SEASON
66 wooded . acres siluatod at Harrioon
Township. Rural water. fenced. Call today tor
location. $29,000.
12943
KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS
1983 Schull Mobilo Homo, 14'x70' with 3 btd·
rooms, balh w/garden tub, living room, nice
alzed kitchen aquipptd ..;111 appliances, electric heaVcentrai air. Alithia rastirig on 4.8 acres
+ okjer bam, com crib, metal building with con~

12939

LOCATION IS IDEAL!
Super builcing lola. Approx. 6 acrat each, lev·
ol. Rural waler available. City schools. 12933

•

@
IQUAL

~ ­

DI'POIIIlUNIIf

PRICE REDUCED! 49 ACRE FARM
In Walnut Township, tillable land, pasture' and
woodlot. Agood sizo tobacco base and tobac·
co bam. ThrH bedroom mobile home with
spring devolcpmenl plus anolhor nico homoSilt with utililill in place including septic system. A graal hunting area. Pnced today at
$36,000. Ploasa call tor mora details. 12935
LOTS OF RIVER FRONTAGE
Prioed at $2,800 and up. Call tor mora details.
12916

12936

3 ACRES MIL .
Siluatod in Morgan Township. Good homo site.
Rural water and electric avadabla.
12917

cnoto ftoonng. Call today!

AHOUSE TO CALL HOME I
3 bedroom ranch featuring I~ baths, firaplace
in iving room, well designed kitchen , family
room, baSI!IMinl. Rocontly ihslalled heal pump
l'oilh goa btlckup. Garage, patio ..;111 docking,
plus much more. Slate Route 160, city
schools. Mako an appointmonlloday. 12141

ACREAGE
13+ acres. Green Township . Listed al
$110, 000~ Lots of development around the
area. Soma land is wooded. Smail stream run·
ning across proporty and hasd a small pond.
Homesite is graded off. Hasd alaclrio and rural
water availablo. Call us now.
12927
ATTRACTIVE RANCH HOME
ON JAY DRIVE
OW111 3 bedrooms, living room , family room,
eat-in kitchen newly remodeled, 111.1 bath,
attached 2 car garage, central air, Groan
Townohip, city schools. Within minutos ol hos·
pital and town. Call for an appointment.
sss.oo~.oo . r
. ..- t2932
·-

NEW! - NEWI- NEW!

This modular Is only 9. months old and situated
'on OYII 1-112 acre. 3 badrooma. 2 full beths,
living room. study, formal dining. family room,
ai\Jdy wlshalvlng. attached 28'x30' garage .
Electric heal pump. Make an appointment today.
to view this beaulilul home with avery extra
possible. Immediate possession! Rio Grande
area
12919

l~dg

BEAT THE RENT RACE!!!
With this 2 or 3 bedroom home. Remodeled
vinyl siding , storage building, 1X. acre plus
excellent garden area . Tobacco allotment.
Raccoon Township. Unbeatable price ..$29,000.

Calltoday.

..

#2895

PRICE REDUCED! MULThPURPOSE
Excellent location. Residential or commoreial
property.... 35 West area. Vinyl sided 3 bedroom ranch. Over 1 acre lot and appmx. 1,100

sq. ft. commercial building.

12901

YOU CAN AFFORD TO TAKE ALOOK
AT THIS HOME _- ONLY $22,100
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
3 bedroom ranch, eat·in kitchen, bath, utility
and more. Approx. 1 acra lawn. Call to lake 1
poap al this onal
12930

•

WHAT MORE COULD YOU ASK FOR
AT THIS PRICE, S32,m
3 bedroom ranch homo with living room. oat-in
kitchen, utility, and balh. Nice fenced-in lawn
and attached carport. Wilh in minutes of Holzor
Hospital. Call today.
12875
VACANT ACREAGE
ONE OWNER LIQUIDATION
Raccoon Township .......................... ,.. 188 AI: res
Raccoon Township ...............................80 Acraa
Huntington Township ...........................62 AcNI
Huntington Township ........................... 80 AI: liS
Harrison &amp; Walnu1Township................81 Ac:rtl
CALL TODAY FOR MORE INFORMATION
IWVC,
WHAT IS THE SENSE IN PAYING YOUR
HARD EARNED MONEY IN RENT?
When you could ba paying for this remodeled home. Uvlng toom, bath, toreed air, geo hea~
nowor deck, nulled among shade lreaa· on
approx. 1 ac11 lol.
12920

Dswltt- Btde~

446-8147

IB

REAlt00 8

�·••-- • ••• -·•• -

- ·· · ~- •• ~·

""• '' ··-- • _,_.. ,__ ,,_,.,_,.__,..r•----- ·-- • ·--·,--~---_.,..._.,_M_ , __ M •~,..--- · - · -•-•--·•- ,.,. .__,,_ __,., ____ _,,,..__,~.,.. -- - ... ~•- •' ..,''1"" .• -

.... - . .... • "' ,.. •

,..r_.., ....... ____

PO'·

·-~-·--""- -· · --~ ... ..- -

.-

..

' .

-

\
Page--D4--Sun~ay. n

Employment Serv 1ces
11

Help Wanted

•• POSTAL JOBS •
YOUR AREA
123,700 Per Year Plut Bentllta, ·
Pottal Carriere, Sorters, Cltrb.
For An Appllc1t1on And Exam
lntormltlon Call 1·21tans.9807
Ext. P·M32 g o.m. To 9 p.m., 7
Days .

2

In

Memory

I
In memory of
LINDA ROUSHJOHNSON who

left

us Dec. 31, 1983.
Wo never undorolood
why God llkea lho onM
wolov.,
But He nHdo • lol of
Mlgtlo lo olng obovo.
So Ho chooo Lindo to
WMr 1 Golden crown
A porlecl 1ngel wo know
Ho htolound.
Bul whtlll meano to looo
her, no one will •ver

know.
We lhlnk of her In oilence
and make no outw•rda
'lhow
A Golden h11rl olopped
billing, her lender
hondo al reol
God broke our hoariO lo
provolo uo
He only llkoolhe bool
So looking back In oor·
raw, along tho path we
trod
Wo chorloh tho yoaro we
opent wllh her
And leave tho real lo

wv
11

11

Help wanted

11

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help wanted

Nucloor Modlclno ~ochnologlll" .
Fuii-TJme Dly Potitlon, ARAl
Or NMTCB
Roalolorod
Dr
Elif:btt
Prlmt Nucliar
Mtdlclnt.
~- .,...
S. .E.C.T. dJIIo~nco Dtlorld1
Yurs . Of Ex~rlence Coula
Subt lthut For Aegllttrtd ,.._
qulremtnt, Conttcf Persanntl,
AI Plllunt VIII; Hol..st•t .......
~ • ...~ , ~
-,.,..."340, A•I'V5
'
moko moro mDMyl
.week job prePIJratlon

lrl,m.ctiale bpenlngl Avatieblt Rtgllt.,H Nur.., CMSI t-payl
For Co~lllod NullO Aldlo. St~· Up To $52 000. F101 Pllvato
lng S.IIJY $oUO Por Hour. Sign Houolng. 11.~.,000 Sign On Bonuo.
.
On 8onu1 Av1llablt. Cont1ct: . 1-600-123-1T.Jt.
Dtbbll Gulley, ADON, Plnocl'll1
C11,r1 Center, 170 Plntcratl
Driv1, Golllpolll, ON 4583t, 614o RnldlniMan~Qer to live on tHe
446·7112.
and man•~ mlnl..toragt com·
LABORERS
=~~;• olnts.Pomeroy, 1114~
Eam to· $4.50 wo,kly, will train,
several opanlnga. lilso p.r1·
llmt, 1-800·551·1545
' Vehlclt operator. 20-30 hre per !~~~~~bo~U1~no~n:trod~ltlon~o~l
Need extra, euh? Bt your own WHk, 14.50 per hr., mutt have
(ONOW), call1.aoDball. Work from homt aluHing . valid Ol'llo drlvtra llcen..,
HOBBY INCOME Making lltmo envelopes. For trn lntorm1Uon, ability to auceeafully compltlt .14
Business
For Craft Festival . Call 1·900- no obligation, und SASE to: ptiHngtr ualttanct tralnln'g,
884·2245. tMust Bt Over 18, Ftt Muaklngum Ara Publltl'ling, read, copy &amp; record, and fallow
Training
Box .-,&amp;1, Zantavllla, OH 43702
oral Instructions. Pitt.. Hnd
$9.95).
rttumes to Bob Wood Meigs R 1
N IIISo h ot
Co. Board ol MRIDO, 1!10 Car·
llro n
ow
ut •• om
ADVANCEO COMMISSIONS •
teton st., Svraeust, OH 457'19, Busln111 College, Spring Valley
1
EOE
.
Piau.
Call
Todiy,
114&lt;441-436711
Paid Wa1klyl Earn Up To $100K
Firat Y11r. Call 1·800.729-6659
==-----====~R:og!l~•':":'':lo:n.:fgo.Q5·1274S.
TODAY!
8
Public Sale
, ASSISTANT OIRECTOR
&amp; Auction
5 - Happy Ads
FOOD SERVICE
Progressive 26st Btd JCAH Ac·
General Contractor Sttking
Full·Time Stcrwlary For Job Site
Offlct. Experience With Com·
pultra Helpful. Pltau Forward
RHumts ·To: P.O. Box 113,
JACKSON ST., VINTON, OH.
ChHt'llra, OH 45620.

I

5

Happy 23rd
Wedding
Anniversary
]ohn]r. &amp;
Wanda K. Waugh

Ads

You have eo m1ny Jobs
Mom, Wllo &amp; Friend
To ourllvee you always
tond
You're alwayo there to
underotand
When anyone needs a
helping hand
Now you're the big
Flve-0 and we love
you 10.

From Tmcy, Kristi, Scott,
Phil, Joey &amp; ]ody

Happy Birthday
Lindy Lee
8

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE
SATURDAY, JAN. 4th, 1 P.M.

ANTIQUE &amp; COLLECTIBLES
PARTIAL LIST: Oak roll lop desk, oak office desk,
walnut corner cabinet, chairs, kitchen items, hutch
pot belly stove, glassware, granHeware, egg baskets,
cheese baskets, rug beater, Iron kenle, applebuner
stirrer, knives, tins, wagons, shoe lathes, tool boxes,
hand tools, blow Iorch, lots of boxes to sort through
and more coming in.
Conalgnmentataken 1·6 P.M. Salurd&amp;ya
or from 11-4 Mon.-Fri.
AUCTIONEER: FINIS ISAAC
614-388-9370 or 388-8880
License No. 3728
Llcenaed and Bonded
Not reaponalble.for accidents or loatltems.
Anyone Interested In a Spring Auction contact us
now. Honea! and Experienced.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

God.
Sodly mllead by molhor,
ltlher, huoband 111d oon.

11

Help wanted

Real Estate Gel)eral

PUBLIC FARM
&amp;VEGETABLE ..
EQUIPMENT
.:...--- AUCTION

Qecember 29,

.December.
18

Wanted to Do

18

Will Bobyoll In My Homo. Rod·
ne~ Area. Aetlrtnete Available.
""""· 1'UI
~4 • •••
••.,.,..,..,_,,
,.._
-'1" Po~oblo S.wmlll, don~
h 1 • loa• 10 th1 111 1 11
~'7s.1t~7.
m u

wanted to

Mill PeUII'I ·Dav cafe Clnler,
Sa~
H ~ bl ' hi d
" F
. . , e OnJa e, c I carw. • ·
I a.m. • 5:30 p.m. A~ :n\o10.:.
111010, after IChooi. Drop•""
w·•··m 1 s~~·· ""4 Ntw 1
· ~- ·
..-:,

Public Sail

-9:00 A.M.

,.
·•

Located from St. Rt. 7 at Cheater, Ohio take St.
Rt. 248 to Long Bottom, Ohio approx. 10 miles
.than take St. Rt. 124 Eaat approx. 2'h mllea to
larni. Mr. Pic kana haa aold farm &amp; moving.
"TRACTORS"
1066 Fannall w/01 cab &amp; duels, 80S Farmall w/cab &amp; !Uitlo
656 Farmall Hydroslatic, 574 IH &amp; loader, 300 Farmali
wllive po.\ll&amp;r, Farmall Super MTA w/power altering, cull. &amp;
sidedrasser, 140 Farmall w/cult., s1de dresser. cycle bar
mower &amp; !ape roller, Farmall Super MTA, Fannall M, A.C·
In Memory of
WD &amp; cull., and J.D. 50 wnive power.
ROBERT GARY
"FARM EQUIPMENT"
HOLTER
N.H. 784 chopper w/2 row com hood &amp; window pickup, IH
who peaaed away 1
BOO cyclo a1r com planter 4 row w/monitor, IH 5X16 High
Clarence plows, N.l. 327 2 row com pickor w/12 roll
)'aar ago; Dec. 29,
hus~ng bed, IH 12' disk harrow, NH 479 Haybine, J.D. 7'
1990.
•
709
brush cutter, 645 Vibra chisel plow, NH 519 manure
bodo no one hlo
spreader wlstop gale, J.D. 54 manuro sproader, N.l. Silage
wagon, (3) J.D. hydraulic dump wagons, Killsbro gravily
uld goodbye to nono.
bad on Case wagon, Helix leodcart, IH 17 hoe drill, approx,
heavenly gallo
13 llal bad wagons, Winco 30 PTO generator, N.l. 50'
opened
elevator, NH 56 hay rake, IH 650 chopper, Killsbro gravily
loving Voice
bed on IH wago~ , N . I. manure spnlildor, Gohllaed wagon·,
.. oome"
IH ha"?w lor chtoal plow, 510 plow, Ll. Gain! elevalor, 3 pl.
olt011 oil ond think
sub aotler, PTO grass seeder, fronl hay folk, Mayralh 6"
auger wlmolor, 3 pl. Eazy Flow fertilizer spreader Gehl
grindar/mixor, hay spike, Cenlury 3 pl. sprayor, continonlal
saddle lanks &amp; gaugos, Killsbro gravily bed, bale elevator,
eay;
Danuser 3 pl. 12" poslauger, lront end &amp; ripper lor M, 3 pl.
I wonder why you had
cemtnl miXer, 3 pl. IH sprayer, seoder mounts on Super C,
IH T 11000 mower, IH 7' brush cutter, Gehl blower 10' &amp;
Without 1 chtnco to
14' cultipackers, 4 row rolary hoe, IH 7' 3 pt. blad~ &amp; 20'
goodbye.
Sla~ina silo unloader.
Though out of
"TRUCKS I TRAILER"
you'teevtr
1119
Chev.
flal
bed
!ruck w/goose nook hitch 1971 IH 1500
Sllll mltoed, loved,· ... nil
Loadslar &amp; Hillsbn:&gt; 20' gooseneck cattle trail~r.
ml1111
"DOZER"
You will llvt with me
T. 340 gaslnduslriallivt P.10., •
momOf)'
'GARDEN TRACTORS, MOWERS, TILLERS, ETC."
lJntU lht oncl of limo.
Economy 14 H.P. t~clor, cult. &amp; '!'ower. Simplicily 6108 &amp;
Wllh
deck, 3 HP Slmpllctly push mower, Turllill a HP push
Judy,
mower, 3 HP garden sprayor easy slart, Stihl &amp; weed
I
aalers, gas leal blower, lawn roller, Simplicily 6 HP rolotiller
Bronco mud rider, Honda 3 wheeler, goll cart, &amp; ale. ·
'
"TOOLS &amp; MISC."
Craftsman 1 HP table saw, Echo &amp; McCullough chain saws,
hand. lools, 20 Conlury weldor, 2 HP air compressor,
wold1ng bench &amp; vtca, C clamps, Jig &amp; Skill saws,
Craftsman torchos &amp; gaugos, ballory charger, power
washer, Shop Vac, lloor Jack 20,000 t, Craltsman lool
bom, Sears drill press, lap &amp; die sel, saws, grinders (3)
...-a1er lanks, htalors, rack lor IH pickup, hand !rucks, used
t1res lor 70S &amp;· 574, duels tor 656, blocks, slaal fonco
tlearic, misc. lumbar, (5) hog loedors, (2) la'IJO fans, wood·
&amp; alum. ax!. ladders, (9) tobacco burners, lance cha'ller,
banwts. bottle gas &amp; spaco haalors, logger, scrap Iron XL"
12 chain saw, used truck tires,' 13x16X28 new lraclor'liro
i , alum. slap ladder, gas pump, chain link fence
l·tOIC!ric seodor, yard lighl, Slock Shoo!, bottle gas cannons'
spray boosler pump, hillers. la1g0 field onaka.
'

PUBLIC
AUCTION

•'All Ty.,. LoonoLondoro Sr&gt;tcllal·
lze In er,dh Problems. Ttll Us
:·VDUI-. 603-293·tl41.
, • THE DWVER GROUP
N+TION~LLY KNOWN Homo
,Siirvlct, Frtnchllt Company
·Now.Interviewing For ·Exclusive
•Riahtt For Thlt Artl. Must Have
11f"e Dlilrt To OWn, Optrale
,Afld M•n•a• Your Own Busl·
.neat. lnv11lmtnt Required. Call
'Chuck Davie, 1-601).380.9000.

SATURDAY, JANUARY 4 AT 7 P.M.
LOCATION: From Galllpolla lake Rt. 35 W..t II!
Thurman, turn rlghl at city park. Watch lo(
Auction algn1.
LISTING IN PART: Electric range, refrigerator, (
piece bedroom suHe, 'h bed &amp; dresser, microphone
talile, several ~oxes of dishes, 3 bar stools, sola, 2 :
end
tables , table lamps, bookcase, set ol
Encyclopedias, single pedestal round table, ~lectrt~·
heater, '2 hall trees, 175 bales ol hay, 50 wood fence .
posts, large chain holst, wi~e stralchers, post hole
digger, several axes, antique wheelchair, 2 Rece:
hitches, blacksmith tongs, 3 piece wood lawn turni;:
ture, picnic table, hand saws levels, 2 squirrel cageJ
blowers, ox yoke, boy's iron runner sled, step ladder.:,
log chains, come-a·long, 20 lbs: propane tank, mow' '
lng scythe. large hay rope. SO ft. 1013 extension cord:!
4 house trailer tires, large grind stone, truck running
boards &amp; rear bumper, several rolls battled wire, plat&gt;;.
form scales, several p~ket knives, birdbath, 3 gi~s'.
bicycles, may have several guns, 4 house 'trailer•
axles, house trailer tongue, horse harness, severaf
set of hames, 2 hillside tuming plows, horse cuftiva- •
tors, slip scraper, several single &amp; double trees:
horse collar wilh hames ready lor mirrow.
OWNER; MR. &amp; MRS. PAUL SMITH
SWAIN AUCTION SERVICE
KENNETH SWAIN
446-3159
DIAN CALI.AHAt(
·
Gelllpollo, Ohla.'
Galllpolla, Ohio

PLAN Ill
When you ooloct lhio spotless 3 bedroom, 2
balh ranch horne wilh la'IJO gr-at room, formal
dining room 111d fully equipped kilchen. Olhar
foa!Urlls include a lanced back yard and over·
sized 2 car garage. Priced ar $54,900.
1509.

31 Homes for Sale
:~ Rooms, Corner .Lol, 311 H8n·
;;t-.an StrHt, Henderson, WV.

,$21,000. Coli 614~46·7523, 304·
:&amp;75-1488.
.
;cape Cod style 3 bedroom, 1
,112 bathli, tormif dining &amp; living
roam, full blltmtniJ. central air,
CION to Hotpllal 11 shopping
1tru, will contldtr . lrade lor
,lorm or acroogoln Galli a County
,Dhlo,.Somrvlno Reali•, 304-515•
1
3030 or&amp;7'5-3431 •
·
Doubll Wldo With 1 Aero Land,
Gallipolis Ferry, 3 Bedrooms
lathl, Electric, Central Air,2
• 37,000• 304-675-?21 7.

32 Moblle·Homes
.
for Sale

~2x65 Memory $3,500, Netds
Somt Repairs. 614-446·7444 .

1!172 12x60 Skyline, 2-bdrm, ox·
c.tlent cond, new carpet, un·
dtrplnnlng Included, must s11,
~oo. 61-f-7'12·2233 anytlmt "~'
t174 Holly Park, 12x10, 1112
blths, completely remodlltd,
tJo,aoo. Investment will stU
O,voo. 304·m·5840.
1iJ1 Clairmont 14170 , 3 bedroom•J 1 bllh, wJunderpemlng
lf\.d rronl porch, gas hut,
~ral llr, must mov1, $8,500.
. 3!!4.f62-2341.

LO-~ng

Memory of

R. GARY HOLTER
who w• killed 1 yaar
ago today,
December 29, 1990:

Little did I know that
morning u I 1toocl by
rrry front window, nw
you ddve In aero••
the rood, filled your
c•ne with dle11l fuel
and went on down lhe
road to work, that II
would bathe llat time
I would -you.
I al,._. opened the
door to . .k you to
come In the houH, ••
1 wantocl 10 uk lboul
cutting a dud trll In

Gordon'• yard, but I
didn't.

-ma

It IIIII
like 1
dre~m. I llllp think·
lng eoma day the
door will open and
you'll bl coming ln.
But dllp down In my
heart, I know you are
gone to return no

-·

llldlf mlend by
Mom, Maly Klllluyn;
Brother, Gordon;

Slater, SMron, Family
llld Frlende.

I

45 6", 8-16" risers,
. (3) short 6' plpt, (3) 6" heads
(40) 5' pipe 30', (3) ela , 2 anglo 5", (2) plug 5", (2) 6xS
reducaro, (8) nsors 5", (2) rako .oH ~. 1 short pipe 5", (1)
5x4' ra&lt;lu.:.r.
"VEGETABLE EQUIPMENT"
4 ro'!' plant sellar, 1 row plant sailer, 1 row plastic layer,
tomalo grader, 11zor &amp; conveyer, John Bean Sprayer
wi'Mnd blast &amp; drops.

"FEED"

Approx. 300 ton ol com silage in uprighl silo, balance ol
com silage loft in bunker silo's. Whatever hay ioltl1 el limo
of salt.
OWNER - WARREN PICKENS
"Fanrr aquipmenllo sla~ ooling al 1:00. All maclllnary hal
been taken catt ot. Come prepared to buyl
Thtao items havo botn added !rom lho lole Rodnay
Chevalier.
"TRACTOR I EQUIPMENT"
John 0..111 4020 wicle fnlnl w/year around cab, McCordy
Nl PTO elevator wldoublo chain,
DAN SMITH
AuclloMer
614-114~2033

· Ohio 11:144
W. Vo. HIS

C..h

..... _

, Po•lllve 1.0.
R.tmh11111118 by
EMtem Band Booetera

..... ,

r•ponalblelor n1ldon11 or 1oea

44

Apartment
for Rent

2BR,

bath,

kllchen ... Newly
remodeled. Nice area, big yard.
$325/mo., $325 dip. Days 614•
446·1157, Eva. 614-694·4501.
3 room and bath In Middleport, ·
fully carpeted and furnished
$225 plus ti.Clrle and deposit:
614·992-5071
BEAUTIFUL APA
ATMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jackson Pika
from $192/mo. Walk to 1hop 1
movlos. Caii614-446-256U. EOH.
Cl
aan1 ,2 bdrm, unfurnished apl.
In Mlaaleport, no pala, .,,.. hut,
2·,111._81- ::-:.,-...,-_ _
1,6:-1'-·-99,..
Compltlly Furnished Small
Houst, $250/mo. Pouo Ulilillll,
And Ooposit. 614·446.()330. Call
Before 7p.m.
Efftnciency apt In P1 . Plnsant,
nlct neighborhood, Hud aeeepled, 1·304·675·6042
1::--:--:--:---:cc::----,Fumlahtd
Efllcl1ncy,
All
Ullllllu Paid, Share Bath,
$90Jitlo. 019 Second Avenue,
I :a:-'-111,;-po'-ll,_o:"'&amp;,t4..t4
:-'-:f.3
:cM:_:_: ;5·:-:--:--:Graciout living. 1 and 2 btdroom apartments al Village
Mlf'Or
ond
Rlvoroloo
Apartment• In Mldd~a rt. From
~ae . Call614·-·
. EOH.
"'
·In Mlddlopo~, Ohio. 1 and 2'
NdroOm tumithtd apt, eomt
whh utllitin ..ld, reftrence and
dopooM required, 304-B62·25e6.

'*"•

FREEDOM TO ENJOY YOUR LEISURE TIME
Thera's a minimum ol rnainlenance on this 3
bedroom bi·lovel. The backya!d is lanced and
. you will enjoy tho deck just off the dining area.
Priceil at $39,900. ts06
LOCATION- LOCATION. LOCATION
Ask anybody! 'location is mosl impor1anl when
selecting a home." Here'• a 6 room home on 1
ai:lll wilh a great view of !he river and only 5
milu lrom town. Includes 3 bedrooms, firo·
place, lull basement, garage and bam.
$59,500.
1116

Affordable 3 bedroom home I
clo11 to
!own cily oc:hool district. Homo
oal·in
kitchon , ulilily room, remodeled room petfecl
lor sowing room or nursery. New gas lon:ad air
lumace. Vinyl siding makta maintenance
easy. Detached 1 car garage. Silualed on
epprox. 314 acre lot. Only $33,000. Owner ve.y
anxious to IMIII. Call today to mako an appoint·
mont lo sea.
1801.

FOR A LOT OF "LITTLE REASONS",
CHOOSE THIS CLASSIC.....
1) In town convtnelnce - kids can walk lo
schools and activities.
2) Ample living space- formal living room, di1&gt;
ing room, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, sunny kilchln,
family room (over 2,000 sq. It)
3) Ample slorage space -large attic and bas•
men~ 1 car garage
4) Tho price- $63,000.
All this for the special people in your lila .
f6ot.

•
AFFORDABLE UVING
1973 Doublowidt offers 3 bedrooms, til balhs,
oal·in k~chen wilh range and refrigerator and
dining room. Situated on a 1 acra, mil, wooded
lot. $22,000.
1221
WANT A BEAUTY OF A HOllE WITHOUT A
BEAUTY OF A PRICE?
Than !his 1988 Fainnont Townshouso (14&lt;70)
Is for you. Large living room, dining area wilh
built·in buffol, la'IJO masler bedroom with built·
in desk and dreaser, 2nd bedroom, large balh
wilh garden lub. Enclosed laundty area wllh
new Whirlpool washer and diytr. Ouldoor a111a
offers nice cleck, conc1111t block sidewalks and
and sloraga building. Looalod on a ...,ltd lot or
movo lo your own lol. O«enld a! a price !hat
can'! be beal, only $15,500111
1110

HOME I LOT FOR $29,t001t
Quiet counlry surroundings make !his ,3 badroom homo a«raclivo. Located close lo shopping. Ftalures 2 full balhs. large living room ,
oat-in kilchon and dining a111a. Plenty of palk·
ing. Not many places availablo lor thts pri.:. In
good condition.
·
1218.
IDEAL BUILDING LOTS NEAR RIO GRANDE
Located approx. 1 mila south on Rt. 325. We
have several very nice building lois still avail·
ablo. Each has 5 acrea, several are adjoining
each olher (lor a large parcel). Counly water
available. Pnced $8,900 to $12,900.
1207

4:1

A GOOD PLACE TO STARTIII
Nice 1983 Mansion mobile homo on BOX230,
mn nicely landscaped lot This home offers
nice aa,l·ln kitcheri, living room, 2 bedrooms, t
balh. Can be bought lumished at $14,000, or
unlumished al $12,500. Call to make !his
aHordabto home yours.
1608

Rooms

RNALLY .
HOMEWORK
Ira all bean dona! This 2 year old home is
ready and waiting for you. Slight contemporary
design provides a very spacious !eel. Larg~~
compltmtnl ol casement windows let tho
sunshine in avon on cloudy days. Baaulilul
kllchen. 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths. Nice clack
overiooklng lilt professionally landscaped ·
ya!d. City schools. $79,900.
121t

SPLIT LEVEL - ThtM Ieveii lhlt provide
zoned 111111 lor Mparale aclivilits ollamiy llv·
l~g, yo! combined givao • ..,.,. wilh a good lral·
l1c flow. 3 badroomt, 21\ btths, dining room
living room, efficient kitchen and larg• L:
shllpt!llam~y room.' Heat pump, .:.ntraltir, 2
ctr gtragtl tnd otortg. building. Loctled in
Cloarvltw Ealllls Subdivision. Clly achoolt.
$72,500.
1401
·LOTS I ACREAGE - Two 1 acre lott and 11
acre• lor oale on Rt. 35 near Spring Yalloy.
Localed on Rl 35 and old Rl. 35, lhla pn:&gt;porty
Ia privale and convenient. Lola are priced at
$7,900 end the 11 ac1111 Ia $38,500. Call lor
lnlonnUon.
.
1223

(·l~.) . ~46-364-4 . ' David Wiseman, Broker, 446-9555

Spill
Firewood Dtllvorod, Wt Accept
Hup And Emorgoncy A..
llllnct, 614-446-885f.

Ir-~::::::::::::::::::::::~--~::::::::::::::::::::::~BRIDGE
. ·

NORTH

Jl.ll.ll

tAKQ

•ua

fAKit1

tu

MIXED HAY

PHILLIP
ALDER

RDIItcllales 51Sper ·

bale. St~ecllttcloors.
Hay • 500 IIJ· bales.
Ptra Reel Clover
$2.00,. ..

245-9460

wm

EAST

tau

t!Of61
.Q 101

9A962

+96$1

tJ2

t!OI

tKQH
SOUTH

I.B.P.A. award
Jor best play

tJ72

'H

• Q8 7
tAJ651

Ex1r1 Nice 357 MagnuM Tauru•,
Brazil And Hol1t1r. $275. Roco
Tiller, Blcyclt, 304-675-6413.

By Pbllllp Alder

53

Press Association awards plaques for

Soolb

Weo1

the best·bid, besl·played and best-defeuded baads. The 199!' winner for the
best·played baDd was Sbmuel Friedman of Israel. The deal occurred dur·
lng the match between Israel and Bel·
glum alibis year's Comroon Market
Champlonsblps in Athens.
In three no-trump, declarer has sev·
en top tricks. The other two could
come from a favorable location of the
heart ace and a good diamond split.
But it is better to tee off by playing on
clubs. Friedman won the opening lead
of the spade four in the dummy aod
called for the club two. When East
played low, declarer finessed the jack
and was pleasantly surprised wben it
won the Irick. After that agreeable
start, bow sbould be continue?
Friedman now bad elpttrick.s, but
be didn't wish to gamble on tlie dia·
moods being worth four tricks. Also,

I NT

Pass

Real Estat'e General

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North

Every year the International Bridge

Nortk
It
3NT

Eut

Pus

All puo

Opening lead: • 4

South was short of batid entries to establish the clubs unless tbey were :1-3.
Fril!dman found a simple yet very ef-·
feclive solution that wouldn't occur to
J!IOSt players. He led a spade to dummy's ltillg, returned a club to the ate
and led another club, discarding dum·
my's last spade boaor.
East was endplayed. U be returned
a spade, declarer woold win in band
and es18blisb bis fifth club while still
holding the diamond queen as ao en·
try. And if East returned a !'e!l card,
dummy's heart king or diamond 10
would be established as the ninth trick.

e.-............. aa

Real Estate General

.....

Real Estate General

LAYNE'S RJRNITURE
Complett ho.mt furnishing•.
Hours: Mon-Sat, t-1. 614-4460322, 3 mllu out Bullville Rd.
FrH O.llvtry.
·
PICKENS RJRNITURE
Now/Uood
Hounhold lumiohlng.- 112 mi.
Jtrrleho Rd. Pt. PINunt, WV,
call304-675-1450.
RENT20WN
614-441-3158
Vl'ra Furniture
Solo &amp; Chllr, $11.10 WHk'
Rocllnor, U.47 WHk, Swlvol
Rocker, $3.63 WMk.Bunk Bod
COmplMe $8.41 WHk, 4 Drlwer
Chool, $3.28 WHk; Pooler Bod·
room Suitt, 7 pc., $'1&amp;.17 WHk,
Include• Baddlng.Country Pin.
Dlntllo With IIIMCh &amp; 4 Cholro,
$10.9S W01k.OPEN: llondoy
Thru Saturday, ta.m. to 8p.m.1
Sunday 12 Noon Till 5p.m. 11
Mil I I OH Rou11 7 On AaU1e 141,
In Ctnttnary.
Sott On All ColJIOI In Stockl
VInyl, S4.99 yd. Carpot $4.00 Up.
MoR~hln' ColJIOII. 614-441-11144.
Solid lllpll CoHN Tobll And 2
End Tlbltt, Love Seat, Call Af·
!or 5p.m. 6t4-448-2415.

1150. CORNER LOTS. Vtry 'nice home of·
ors 3 BRs, balh, kilchen, carpet, firoptace, 1
car delached gorage.

Houses lor Rent

1235. DO YOU LOVE THE OLDER
HOMES IN TOWN?- Thia one is located
Ius! across from GAHS. 5 BRs,.4 baths, LR,
kitchen, sun room, comer lot
1142. $35,10011 - WHY PAY RENT? Ranch slylt homo on SR 160, 3 BRs, LR.
kilchon, balh, attached garage, 100X300 loL
1168. LeGRANDE BOULEVARD - All
brick 3 BRs, LR, kilchon; balh, lull basement: gas lon:ad air,.aHachod geraga, clly
oc:hools.
1246. PRIVACY SEEKERS LOOK AT THIS
ONEI • Large log home can ba purt:hlled
wilh 162 acrlls or 2 acres. This home offers
4 BAs, 3 baths. equipped ki!chen. LA, FR •.
2 ftreplaces, heal pumplctnl. air (backup
system), oversized 2 cor allachad garage.
Frontage on Raccoon CtMk.
1173. OWNER HAS REDUCED THE
PRICE BY $10,000111 Very nice homo oft·
ors 3 BRa, 2 balht, LA, kilchon. This farm
Ia situated on Sugar Creak Road. Ohio
Townahip, and has a new 28x40 bam,
· lobacco baso. Call lor more deltila.

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

1 . bedroom trliltr, pay 1 own
utillll11 pl1.11 dtpot ll, 304-675·
2i!'l5.
2 -bdrm mobllt homt tor rtnl,
rox. 3 mllll from Pomeroy &amp;·
dlaport1 ·Ioiii tltclrlc, 614·
-4233
2-Ldrm lrtiltr ln Racint srea,
coli 614·965·4233
NIH
3Br Mobllt Homt,
Rtltrtnet . And Otpot ll At ·
qut1od. Vlnlon, ON. 614·388-9243
9 t •M. To 10 P.M.

RING IN THE NEW YEAR
Gran! St!'HIIn Middeport. 2 alo.y lrarne homo silualed
on 2 lois, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, full basement, .:.rport,
fireplace also a 2 sial hor&gt;e shad w/atlachtd lotd &amp; lack
room . Fencod lol. ASKING $34,900. IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION! COME SEEI

d;

WELCOME TO 1822... THIS IS FOR YOUt A beautiful
modem 2 slory conlemporary home wilh 4 bedrooms, 21\
balha, fireplace, bay window, pine walls, basemen! on 3)1
acres. ASKING $109,900.

Apartment
for Rent

Furn,
Paid.
614·

Ave,
,.'

.

-

F$

~oA.,.~mont,

\I

Wo~h,lt4-446~.
Oolllo Timlior PRMiucto

Rata Or Mice? In :vour Houtt?
Buy ENFORCER, KUla nrto &amp;
mice In only 1 t.cf1ng
GUARANTEIOI Avollobll ol;
Boum True Volulltot:!J .11 Wilt
Mtin Street, Chetttr, ~

·uoo.

,.,,

••

OJY Rrowoilcl, $ai Plck·Up Lood
Dtllv- And Stocked, Don

Rata ·Or Mice? In Your HouH7
Buy ENFORCER, Kille rato &amp;
miCe In only 1 tNdlng,
GUARANTEED! Avollablo at:
O'DIQ Trut Valut Lumber, &amp;34
Eaot llaln StrHI, Pomaroy, OH

1201. PRICE REDUCED TQ $55,0001 - 3
BR home silualed near HMC and Rt. 35
shopping aroa. Call for mora delails.

With
Pe11,
1100

CAROLYN WASCH, 441-1007'
~ONNY GARN~S. 4.46-~707 .. A

s"-.

Portoblo lighted chlngnbll Itt•
tor olgn rog. $399. Spoclol $2Q9.
Frot f-tldollvory. Plootlc Itt·
1. . 531.50 box. AAA Signa, ,.
~33-:1453 1ny1lml. D"ir tx·
plmJon.4.

downtown
pttl. 614·
1100 .., n, com·

Locotod, 4111·112
Avonua, OotHpoUo.
Sit
Alfrirl•ator, Wat• Fur· .
n
• 1246/mo. 1100 Dlpooll.
114i!M8-3870.

,.

THIS COULD BE THE YEAR TO START '(OUR OWN
BUSINESS! - In !his omall building wilh 1n even smaller
price! Localed on Main 51. in Pomeroy. Showroom wilh
plenty of slorage apace. Rooms upstai r~ wilh g111at view
ole nvart ASKING $15 ,000.
:

1215. GREEN TWP. - JUST MINUTES 10
GREEN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL - All
.brick homo oHtrs 3 BRs, eat·ln kilchti1, LR,
altachad garage, full basemen!. Si!Ualtd on
1.25 aCIII
1260. OFRCE BUILDING LOCATED AT
250 SECOND • OHice down and 1 BR
apa~manl upslairs. Vory nice building. Call
lor delails.
tl7t. STATE ROUTE 218 -1 .263 acre iliA.
Very nice home olfero 3 BRs, 1 balh, living
room , kilchan range and refrigerator, fire·
place, cily waler, basemen!, cilyschools.
1217, JUST THE HOME FOR YOUII Very
nice all brick home located on Kalhy Sl.,
just on sR 35. New kitchon, 3 BRa, LR, d•n·
ing, 11\ bath.·

HAVE YOU RESOLVED 10 GET AWAY FROM IT ALL?
- How about a lildo house thai woold make a great cabin
or hunting lodge. Localed In Antiquily close to lht river,
ONLY $5,900 very basic.

1513. 5 ACRE LOTS. Grton Township,
Fairlitld Vanco Rd. 111d Wiloon Boslic Rd.
Baautilul place 1o bu~d 1 home.

IN THIS NEW LISTING YOU CAN MOVE UP WITH
STYLE - .POMEROY - 2 Slory lreme home wllull
belement. 3 bedrooms, 2)1 baths , 2+ aCIIIs with a garclen
area, 1 car gartga wilh wolkshop, shed, patio, built·ln
bookshelves, fireplace, cenlral alr. ASKING $31,900.
COME TAKE ALOOKI

Chttter Twp. Old originol log home wilh
addlllon added. Drilled w.ll, counly wator
ovallabte. Hao botn owned by same lamlly
lor 4 ganoralions.

THIB IS THE YEAR TO BUY THAT NEW HOMEI WHY
WAIT ANY LONGER? GET OUT OF THE OLD AND
INTO THE NEW...WE CAN HELP YOU DO BOTHI GIVE
U1 A CALLI IF YOU WANT TO IllY OR IELJ.,..YOU
GOT THE RIGHT ONEI

HAPPY NEW YEARI

e:

HENRY CLELAND......................................·•••It2-1181
TRACY BRINAGER ..................................~........Mt-2431
JEAN TRUSSELL. ................................,,,,;,,,,;,,,Mt-2110
,JO HILL.••••••••••••••••.'....................................................

OFFICE........................................- ....................-.2211

4316. MEIGS CD., 240 A., mn, Btdlord &amp;

1510, WHITE ROAD - 20 acroa, mA, vacanl
ltnd, approx. 1 milt lrom Chtrolais lake.
$20,000.
'
1121. S21,900....EVIIII Holghll, 3 BR, LR,
kllchon, balh, lull butmonl.

•

Merchancllle

Rentals

.-.

''

&amp;

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1209. RIO GRANDE AREA - 2.87 ac111s
mn, lovely 2 slory homo wilh 3 BAs, 1y,
balhs. kilchan. LR. Ideally located naar new
higlway.

WE NEED LISTINGS ·
. . . ..

WllhiiO

54

. 54 MIICIIianiOUI ·

Merchandise

Jl86. QUIET, SECLUDED salting jus!
mlnules lo HMC and downtown. Home
ftaluras 3 BAS, kilchen wlranga &amp; refrig.,
LR, DR, ca!pOI. firepla.:., city school disl

.
'

Wis'eman ·Real Estate

Sunday nmes-Sentlnei--Pag.-os

1160. NICE RANCH STYLE HOME localed
on Kinabn Dr. oilers 3 BRs, balh, LR, kilch·
an, lull baoamon~ ges heal. Nice starter
home or retirement homo.

tf

NOT LARGE AND LAVISH
Neilhar is the pricel But il has everything you
need; 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, equipped kitchen.
Pnced altho economy end ol $39,9001 1511

R-Hionod

dJYOJO, Nth $tOO ond Ill&gt;· W1
llrYICI oil mokto. Tho Wllhor &amp;
Dryor
114-441-21144.
S.Moned Alh Qok And Hick·

D. C. Metal Sales, lac.

30oi-67W3C\.

42

Merchancllle

Pole But'ldin

3M' 2 Car Garage, Brick Hom• In
Otuntry. No House Pttt .
$400/mo. Pluo Dtposlt 614·446·
1f2.
.
Hqu11 tor rwnt, 2 bedrooms,

SPRING VALLEY AREAl
Very well cared lor mainltnance lrto ranch
home in exctllonl neighborhood. Home
·~cludas 3 bed':"oms, eat·in kilchtn, tormal
d1n1ng room, lovtng room wilh a«raclive lir•
pl~c•. and family room with anolher liroplace
(wtlh tnsart). Good slorago, 2 car garage wilh
brtozaway, oulbuilding. Gas heat (low billa)
canlral air. Priced to sell. Please don'! htsila~
to call today. Call Dave a1446·9555.
1228.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FUANITURI'. 12
DUva St., Oolllpollo. Now &amp; UNCI
tumllurt, ttelttra, WMtem I
WOiit booio. 6~3158.
VI'RA FURNITURE
614-441-3151
LIVING ROOM: Solo &amp; Choir,
$199.0CI· Rocllnor $14UO;
Swlvat Rockor, $99.00; CoHN •
End T1bln, $8i.OO $oi.DINING
ROOM: Toblo With 4 Paddoci
Chllro, $14i.OO; Count.y Plnl
Dinltto With linch And 3
Chllro1, $299.00; llatci! z
Door nlch $349• Dr
00
Stt: Olk Tobit, 42d2 Hti 1
Bow
Bock
Cholro,
$82t.OO.BEOROOM: Pootor Bod·
_ , Sullo (5 pc.), $34i.OO: 4
Orowor ChHt, $44.95; Bunk
Bod, 122t; Complolt Full Man
Sat, $105.00 911 ; 7 pc. COdor
B111room SuHo, $899.00.0PEN:
Monday·Trwu SaturEiay, 9a.m. 10
&amp;p.m., Sundoy 12 Noon Till
5p.m., 4 MU11 Oft Aout1 7 On
Roult 141 In Centenary.

wv

54 Mlacellaneoua

54 MlacellaltiDUI

Antiques
Roome tor rent .. week or month.
Starting at $129/mo. Gallla Hotel. Buy or l tll. Riverine Antiquaa,
1124 . E. Main S.rit1, Pomeroy.
614-446·9!10.
Hou,., u.r.w, 10:00 o.m. to &amp;,oo
S
SIHplng roomt with cooking. p.m., Sundoj 1:00 to 6:00 p.m. 1f-~:=.~~=:;:a:.~
Also trailer space. All hook-ups. 614-992-2528.
II
Call after 2:00 p.m., 304·77354
Miscellaneous
5651, M11on WY.
Cannelbu~, Inc. 45719
Merchandise
~iz1ng in Pole
Merchandi se
1 Wood Po~ A Crib, A·1 Con·
Buildings.
dillon, $25 Firm. 614·9i2·5135.
· Designed lo meet your
51
t9110 LX Thundor Bird, tow
needs. Any size.
.Household
m1111, good cond, 11o,soo. tsas
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
· Goods
Su&gt;uld Ou1d Ractr, axe cond,
FREE ESTIMATES ON
3 Ploco LR Sullo, 3 Ploco End $1,200. 3 Bllglll $50. llch. 304·
Table Sat. S14-251-1157.
571-2928.
Post Bt.ildi~s and
·
County Appllsnct Inc. Good 2 Ploco Living Room Sullo, 5
Package Dea . Save
ulod lppllancu, T.V. lito. o.,.n Monthl ~d. $300. 614-387.()1132.
Hundreds, even Thousands
8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon:.sot. 614· Big 41R, 2 both, Oakqto dream
OJ Dollars.
446·169S, 127 3rd. Avo. G1l• homo bulK tor you $29,1195. S14·
Local Sales Representative
llpolla, OH
816-7311. Display model now
DONNA CRISENBERY
GOOD USED APPLIANCES ( ,o,...
,_n:c·-,-::-'7'"-,,:--o-Wuhoro, dryoro, rol~goroloro, Firewood For Solo, Big Flit Bed
11366 S. SlAt. 7
rong11. Sk1gg1 Applloncoo, . Loods, $45, O.llvorld. 614-448Gallipolis, OH.
Up.,.r Rim Rd. Bnldl Stone i329.
·
PH. 614-256-1633
Croot l!olol. Coli 814-44S.7393.

2$0d room homo, 2219 N. Main
st, $350. month, no ptla, 804·
275-2394.
2''t8Hroom Hou", Otposlt And
Rtftrtne• Required. No Pits.
614-446-467!1.
20r CoHagt In Town, Rtferan·
ceo Roqulrld. $250/mo. 614·245·
9375.
2br Home, Near Gallipolis And
O.llipolls City Schools. 614-446tt17.
21w House Vinton Arta,
f\tftrtncet And Dtpot il Rt·
q~lr.d. 1.14·388·9611.
:J!,BR
on Lincoln Hgls.,
Pamtroy. 614·992·7689 afttr
5:00pm

VACANT LAND..... 19:14 acres localod off
Jackson Pikt .... one oil well which pays royo~
loes. Owner .will sell . wilh or wilhoul mineral
righls. Asking $17,500.
t701

HARD TO BELIEVEIII
Over $1,000 monthly income on !his 3 unil
apertmenl plus mobile home. Apartment building compialoly remodeled in 1978. Located in
Rio Granda near Univorsily. Owner out of town
and wants il sold. Unbelievably priced at •
$59;900111 You put a pencil lo !he figuros and
you'll arrive at the same conclusion 1hav. ...a
great invaslmanll
1404

Furnished

••

KYGER CREEK AREA
12xB5 Roycroft mobile home o«era 3 bed·
rooms. now breaker box and wiring. Silualed
on a .33 acre, m!, lol $10,000.
1227

ln

45.

t; a2 Ookwood mobile homo, 3
~room, 2 baths, double car
91,fage, .city water, 6.5 acres,
~"" flnanclnm, Scmarvllla
RNIIy, 304-675-~40 or 615·3431. Modom 2 l 3 bod1oom apa~·
mtnt In Middleport, 2·batns,
1111 Broozowood 14x70 3br, .614· wtthtrfdryer hook·upk ~quip.
4~fo8126.
ped
lichens.
RafertnciiDtpollt
required.
lj,iibllo Homo With 2 Rooms AI· Phon•
614-US-4448
ahar
tta:htd On 1 AC"i' t, 1 Milt Out Of 8:00pm.
Qthttrvillt, On County Road 87,
s\~.000. 614·2US.2554, 614·286· Modorn 2 BR opt. 614-446-0390.
oilii6.
Naw Haven one b.droom apt,
:Midrm trailer, turnlahtd I new dtpot it and rtftrtnee required,
cflpot $3000, 614·949-2526
304-682·2566.
A1t now, .,.lntod drywall Complatly FUmithtd moblla
njxJular, special factory lncan- t'lomt, 1 milt below IDW_!I 1 over~
A 'II · thouunds, c::tll •~ ­ looking rivtr. No Pita, ~.;A , 614·
441-&lt;)338.
~-466-71171, Ilk lor Todd
•
One and
two
~room
apartment• for rent. 304-675-Lots &amp; ·A creage
2053 01 675-4t00.
A}oprox. lOA.: ~onto old Rt.7 11
One
B1droom Apartment In
r4H• S. of Gallipolis. Tobacco
biM, $29,500 wflh terms. 614· Point Pltatant, WV. Furnlahtd,
Very Cl11n And Nice. No Pttl.
al7.f220.
304-615-t381.
""'' &amp; Aceragt For Salt . Land
Contract. 614-71t7-3044 ahtr
~.m.
Real Estall! General
W.ter lront lot 11 Racine DJm,
rtduced prlct, wu $7000 now
$1000, 114·Mi-2526

.
SMALL BUT SNAP._PY
ExceptionaUy clean and unclutltred 3 bodrtll&gt;rn
ra~ch . No honey-do proJects hare. Donl miss
th11 ona :- .:.11 lor an appoinlmtnl today. You
won'! belovolho price of $37,900.
1505

House !lOki

52 Sporting Goods

• 1111" MEA. Inc.

36

U FE'S TOO SHORTII
Relax and renew yourselt in thio 3 bedroom
homo ova~oo~ng lha river. Brick and vinyl
exterior will keep malntenan.:. at a minimum.
O!htr lealuras Include family room, 2 balho, 2
car garage and salellita dish. Call today lor an
appoinlmenl to stolhis one. Priced at $54,900.
.
1500

"IRRIGATION"
Masler VB
IC!uvllll• r Industrial
IPcoW.r unil , 123 join!
30'
8

~

Rea l Estate

,........

...

IHJ

' f

~eat Estate General

WANT A HOME AT AN Aff'ORI:iABU
PRICE?
THAT YOU CAN MOVE RIGHT IN TO?
Then you need lo lake a look at !his beeuly.
La'!la living/dining n:&gt;om combination nico
kitchen wilh laundry &amp;Ilia, 3 bedrooms 'and 2
balhs. Nowly palnled ceilings and· exterior.
Combine !his low price wilh low inlerosl ralos
and you can lullill your homaowne~ s dream.
Only $32,000.
1613

\'F.~NT~

;
!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommtncll lh•t you do bull·
1"1111 With people you knoW and
NOT to oond monoy through tho
mill until you have lnveatrgated
)ho offorlng. .

I

YOUR INVESTMENT WILL BE PROTECTED
WITH A HOMEOWNERS WARRANTY

Business
Opportunity ·

•

9:00 A.M.

WtlAT !lo,Y'N AI~N
I'M YOUR C/IRisr'Mk.

Fmancial
21

51

Goods

!

SAt. JAN. ~. 1992
9:00 A.M.

'N' CARL VLE® by Larry Wrl&amp;ht

WllllobyoH In My Homo On Ad·
dloon Pike, G1Rfpolls. Rot1ron·
~ Provldocl. 114-367·728&amp;.··

&amp; AuctiOn.

Real Estate General

Pomeroy:-Mlddleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant;

'::
18:-:W::a-n-ted-:-to-Do-- I . KIT

Do

c:i
::::.:::.::::.:::::.~;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;:;:!..:;'";:n;:l~;:od:;d;:*:;:·C;:•ro~
, '::14:::""::'::"::1127l'~.~.;,
8

1991

GREEN TWP. PORTERBROOK
SUBD., WITH VERY NICE RANCH - 3
SRs, LR, kilchen, balh &amp; hall, 2 car garage,
firaplaco.
1172. LINCOLH PIKE- NEW USTING - 3
BR ranch , lanced in yard for_pets or childran, beautiful covered deck, bam slyla utilily
bldg., aHordabty priced.
1178. FRONTAGE ON THE RIVER • 3
BRs, LR, equipped kilchan, lual gillumaco,
cenl air, lull basemen!, altachtd garage.

1193. GOOD IN·TOWN LOCATION -Jus!
a block from grocery slore. Nice home oH·
ers LR, kilchon, BRs, balh , large Iron!
potth.
1245. WOULD YOU UKE TO GET OUT
BY YOURSELF? -This o;ould be lha p-.ce,
baaulilul log home oHers 4 BRs (master
bedroom has a fireplace), 2)1 baths, LR
wiFP, kitchen, dining room, FR. Second old
home on proporty.... 112.5 acres, mA.
t18t. EVERYTHING YOU COULD WANT
- This sectional home is located just a few
minulas fnlm Green Elom. School, 4 BAs, 2
balhs, LR, equipped kilchen, DR, lireplaca,
· •nlral air, 16X32 pool w/haaler. covered
~atio, 20X24 shatter house.
· .1181. CONVENIENT LOCATION •
COMFORTABLE HOME· Ju s! at lho edge
of town lhia home offers 3 BAs, balh, kilch·
on, LR, DR, 24x30 garage. Nice shade
!rats. V.ry well kapl.
. 1154. NICE STARTER HOME - Localed
· jus! allht tdge ol town. This homtloaluras
3 bedrooms, balh, living room, kitchen, din·
ing room and a full basemen!. Five minutes
lo downtown. ·
1140. '40 FOURTH AVE. - Nica home
oHors kilchon , LR, FR. 2 bdnns., bath, DR.
gas hoa~ back potth, closo lo schools.
1224. TAKE A LOOK AT THISIII - Located
on Second Ave., walk to store, church,
sc~ool and shopping. 2 story home olfero
ki!chen, LR, DR, FR , 3 BA s, 2 balhs, gas
hta~ ctnlral air.
1305. 30.5 ACRES MIL Raccoon Twp.
Garners Fold Rd . Pond and bam, lovely
place tor a naw home.

1203. OHIO TOWNSHIP- 53Y, acres, mora
or less. Vary ni.:. ranch slylo home offers
314 bedrooms, LR, kitchen, balh, lull basement. carpet, deck, garage, sicing. To~
baso and lobacco barn. Additional land.
1177. FAMILY SIZE HOME ;. Attractive
hoo\1e located al Centenary, oHers 4 BRs, 2
balhs, kilchan, LR. AHached garage and
nice lawn.

nos. 30.5 AC. MiL Raccoon Twp
Gamors Ford Rd. Pond and bam, lovely
place lor a naw home.
1313. $89,900 - 161 Acres, mora or less.
Hunlinglon Twp ., Woods Mill Rd., Ia~
homo ofto ~ 6 BRs, 2 balhs, LA, kitchen,
FR, t ltclnc heat. Fronls on Raccoon ,
lobacco baso. May be bough!, wilh loss
land or mora.
1228. SPACIOUS BRICK wilh an BOx450'
lot located on 51. Rl 35 naar HMC. 4 BRa,
LR , DR, kilchan, balh , lull basement wloutsidt enlranct, gamga, utility bldg. wilh cor·
port and rT&gt;Jch mo re. Call for appoinbnonl
1153. REDUCED TO $34,800 • Older .
home and 1.75 acre mn, on Naighbolhood
just e short dislanca lrom 141 . 4 BAs, kilchen , LR. DR, unallached garage .
Thtrmopana windows, gas heal.
1145. BE A HOME OWNER! Very nice
slallar home oHaro 4 BRa, 2 baths, LR, FR
dinoffe, full baseman!, gas h..V.:.nl.
cily ochools.

a;f.

t13B. VILLAGE OF CENTERVILLE - Nice
2 slory oHtrs 3 BAs, balh, LA. kitchen DR
gas heal, 2 firepla.:.s. Silualed on i

acre.

.asci

1180. RIVERVIEW FROM YOUR OWN
BACK YARD · Ve.y nice all brick homa o«·
ors 3 BAS, LR wnirsplace, equipped kilchon, lull baseman!.

1282. 6.U A., mA, Section 34, Raccoon
Twp., 110111S on SR 325. $25,000.
1228.•II A. 11/L (Hobart Dillon Subd.)
along Raccoon Cr~&gt;tk, groal lor a mobile
home. Large pino trees on 33 oicleo. All
level.

1278. 17.5 A. m/1, Peny Twp., Symmto
Cruk bottom lend, oome hil, !obacco base.
$9,000.
HU. COIAIERCIAL PROPERTY - 2.4 A.,
mn, 2&lt;18 fnlntago olong SR 7, jui iiCn&gt;SS
from Ohio Alvor I'IUI.
'

1215. RIO GRANDE • Vactnllol Utilitioo
: avollablo. Juot o« SR 326 Mall' tpartrnanll.

1540. GET COZY IN FRONT OF THE
RREPLACE - Aftroctive home olors 3
BRa, balh, kilchon, 12x24 lamily room wilh
firoptace and living room wllh fireplace.
S~u11ed on 1•. 12 acre, mn,

1211. .II ACRES MIL ( Hoba~ Dillon
Su~. ) along Raccoon CrHk, great lor 1
mob1le home. Large pine lreos on 3 aides
Alllevel.
•

�..
I

Page-06-Sunday Times-Sentinel

54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Solid Oak Curvad Glu1

71

Chin•'~~~~~~~~~
~~

Cabinets, Round Oak Tab111.

614-446-4316.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

, ............ !::~:.:·~~

Sam Som'trvlllt'a Army Surplus. ••~.-•••
Camllaugt clothing, Carhartt 10 1::.~=-----­
perc•nt dl1eount, Junior cam- 1982 Lincoln Town car, txctlltnt
tlaugts- regular ptlcll. Ntw cond,
ntw Mlehtlln llraa, new
hours 1ft1r Chrlslmn. Fri., Sal., vinyl roof
$1 htadllntr, 71,000
Sun . Noon • 6pm. other days mllta, $!,000, 614·992~3410
hours call 304·273-5655 (until

Holiday Bltol IN7 Cllryolor 71
for
IAioron I~N; INI Nl. .n
Blntro U7W5: . llfl Nl...n 1171 Chryllor Clirdobl now
BlntroWMh ~J~ tz_ne; 1111 ~- paint, now llrlo, 11000, 3'64..71Colt lt,4~1j lnl CniY. Call';(, Nil lftll lpm

Autos for Salt

1984 Camaro Z•28, T·IOpt, 310 .
1ng,

lUI~,

loadtd, t3200, ao4·

875·3318
' '
1884 Dodge Arl11, 4 dOor, black, Iii.:~ ..,;;
AMIFM, Cltllttt, 4 cyl, new IX•

23418 ·~
Bulo lkyhawk, 12, L 1no
Ford Eoco~. $1,115· 11180
" Oldo

1917 Chi&lt;)' Nova: high ml!tago,

C11111 $2,185; 1814 Old• Cutlut

nltds rtpllr. Good lranaportt·

$1,615· 1184 Otdo Flronu $615;

Uon car. $1,300. For mort lntor·
mallon Call 614-446-2342, A""
tor Paul.

1983 D•t•un $101; 1t82· Dlttun
$796. B &amp; 0 Alrto Saloo, !iWY-

160 N. 614-446,e665.

Christmas) (Other days 3-6pm)
All Chri stmas nctumgea In by

5, 1992. lnsulaltd
Dacron camoflougt coveralls.

December 29,

11

Autoa for Slle

1991 , .

72 Truck• for Salt

1117 Nlooan Blntr,, · Aoklng 1812 ' Chovrolot Plok-up, prloo: •· ,
11,600. 114-441o0711.
1300, 814·248-0017. '
. . .,
1111 ~oyo1e Tlrool, 1 Splld, Air
I 1110 Tullio Tro-.·Aml Paoa Car, Condlllonl!!ll, lharpl lomoona 1178. .Jup truek, ,u1dr11~rao, '
To Tako Ovtr Paymonlo. 814·
no. oond., loadljl1 ow mllta, 21f·l313,
euto, tappt~ new rant llrtl, · :·
•• 000 514 ... '130
f525 llnm, 11•·112-6305
, ,
... · ~·~ ·
'
1UO Ford Escort aT. Asking
1100 GMC Sho~ Bod 12,1DQ 15800. 114-441.0731.
Mll11, 44.3·V-8, 5Spd., Loadod
198!5 Dod_gtr half ton pickup,· •
Wt buy aall or· trade. Jim auto. AMIFM tttrta.. $3$00. 1114· :
S10,900j Atmlngton 11~8 10 GA.
Cochran
Auto
Canter,
5th
and
Full Choke, Aulomatlc:, 5 Shot,
446-7604.
Viand Sl, Pl. Pll. 304·671·1985.
$225. 614.. 48-7357. .
~:::......---

Real Estate General

...

Real Estate General

...

Real Estate General

Stair Stepper $80. Exercise blkt
$35. Both uc cond, 304-675-

4634.

Building

Block, brick, sewer pipes, windows , linitis, ttc. Claude Win·
lers, Rio Grand•. OM Call 614·

Oaehshund,

~1,.1!/SELL D. WOOD

doposlls, 304-675-3526.

Owner/Broker
Eve. 446-4618

AKC Poodlt puppies, toys &amp;
tiny toy1, mimalure· Sehnauzer,
male, salt &amp; ptpptr, Coolville

PATRICK A. COCHRAN
Office Manager
Eve. 446-8655

PHYLLIS L. MILLER
Sales Agent
Eve. 256-1136 ·

MARTHA L. SMITH
Sales Agent
Eve. 379·2651

AKC Sc:ottlsh Terrier pupplts,
very

smart,

health guaranftt, now taking
dtposlls, 614· 594.o46n Athens

Blue Hte~r pups, 304·675·3927
aher6 :00 PM .
Dog Houses For Sale : Savtral

Shoemaker.

1

Wooa 9?.f,aftu, Inc.
Allen

WAITING FOR
- Ia this I 900 + aq. fl. ol
"Jiving space and 1985 Redman dNI. Nice lol
In CenteiVille. Has heat pump, huge living
I'!'Om. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 3 car garage. Call
today.

CONDO IN CITY -All brick with 2 bedrooms, 2
lull baths, equipped kitchen, living room, dining
room, laundry w/Washer and dryer, heat pump,
cent. air, many OJCIIJIS . Very nice. Must see.
$65;000. Call for mora info.
t38S

.

HAPPY JACK MANGE LOTION:

-~~

Promotas Healing And Hair
Growth To Any Mange, ~ol
S!)ot, Or Fungu11 On Dogs And
Horne Without Cortisone! J D

llOME &amp; 3 ACRES IN
1 bath , deck on front and side of homo, a block
24x22. CAll ABOUT THIS ONEil

,.

..

•.

NESTLED AMONG THE TREES' - A 3
bedioom home with family roam. llvln~ room.
bath. Also a large 20x20 building with a 12&gt;&lt;20
shed. All on 1.390 acres. Cory schools.

on

1873
- A 12&gt;65 mobile
on a
'ea tot
dryer hookup in bathroom, 2
·rooms', 13\\ x 11:.1 storage building. Priced at $6,000.00.

61 Farm Equipment
185 Allis Chalmtrt Dlntl Tractor, "$5,950; 0.14 AC With lo1der,

121950, 0-17. AC With Plow, CuttiYIIor, Grain Drill, $2,950; 6~4-

211ti-11522.

2030 JO dlt"'l tractor $599S;

424 lnt'l dl11ol wllh bush hog,

grader blade, $3650; 3400 Fora

wljh loador 15910. Owner Will
Finance. 614·286-8522.

Truck, Hydralic Sprttder,

Box 12 Varlabla Speeds For

Limo And Llm101ono. 614.4488044.

G1hl grinder mh:er, New Holland
7tr. hayblnd, New Holland 9 h.
hiYblnd, AC 2 row, no till corn

pl4:nttr. All good cond. 304-213·

4215.
Jlm't Farm Equlpmant, SR. 35,

West Gal llpollt, 614-446·9m;
Wlda ..lacllon new &amp; Uild farm

tractort 6 Implements. Buy,
sail, uade, 8:00.5:00 watkdays,
Sal. !Ill Noon.

Wanted; Uatd fum equipment,
••r.hlng you want to ntl. 614·
25 -1308, 614·256·6040 AMor
6p.m.

Livestock

.JOOD LOCATION IN TOWN - 3 b~=~~~· ~~::,~~:::~
kitchen, bath. Family room, bedroom,
car gan~ge . Homo has new roof and alum.
NOWIII
BEAUnFUL LOG HOME- 2800 sq. H. of living space, 3
bedrooms 1v.! baths located on 10 acres ana borders
Raccoon 'creek. Green &amp; Gallipolis schO&lt;lls. CALL
NOWIII
MOBILE HOME IN COUNTRY - 3 b~drooms , 2 baths,
large poreh electric hast, central aor, 20x30 garaga,
located on acres m or I in Ohio Twp. CALL FOR
APPOINTMENT.
PRICE REDUCED- LOG HOME WI(H 10 ACRES -~ or
l In Harrison Twp ., 3 bedrooms, H\ bath, large hv1ng
room and kill:hen . Large porch, bam and storage shed
Nice country setting. MUST SEEIII
HOME IN CROWN CITY - 3 bedrooms, living room,
kitchen, bath, full basement. centn1l heat &amp; air condition,
2 car garage. Rent!KI mobile home on back of lot. CALL .
FOR MORE INFORMATION .
OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS- Locet!KI on Rt. 7 (Eu-~
roko) 30x36 block blcfg ., with t!on~ge in basement, 70
H. lrontage on Rt. 7, lot runs to Ohio River, currantly
usod ea Convenient Man and Cany Out. Alllnvonlory,
stock and equipment In store goes, including liquor
license. (C-1)
100 ACRE$ M or L on Friendly Ridge in Clay Twp .
Water and electric available. Priced at $32,500.00.
FOR SALE - 62 acres. Lawrence County.

2 HorM Trailer New Paint, Naw

GOOD INVESTMENT PROPERTY - A 2 story lrame
double located on Second Avenue, Gallipolis, 4 rooms
and bath aownstairs and 4 rooms and bath upstairs. Cal
today.

nros, $1,195; 1990 AOHA Gold·

tng, $800; 8 Year Old Paint Mart,

$650. 114-266·6522.
Blrtchorlng hogs. Coli 304-675~·

·For Salt, 8 month old Angua
htlflrt wllh paptrl, 11.00 lb.

Call 614·446·444l

Thru Black And Whitt Fact
cows Wllh Llmosina Calv11,

614-:ii8-V'lll4.

Transportation

LOCATED IN GALUPOUS- VINE STREET -4 renta
units, good income property. Call for mora Information.
HOUSE IN GALLIPOLIS - 3 rooms apd bath, walking
aistanceto schools and stores. Pricea at $16,000.
GREAT LAND FOR DEVELOPMENT - 40 acres for sale
In the city limits of Gallipolis. Check this one out.
GREEN ACRES- Two lots, 1 large level home site,
H. by 148 ft. city water. Green school. Good condition.·
Priced right at $10,000.

Autos tor Sal~

191'1 SS Nova Supor Sportt 350,

41 Barrell, Shih Kit, 400

urbo

Trans, New Paint, Good Body,
Afbullt Englnt, 2 Door, Runs

Good Wllh Glloo Packo. SI,DQO,
0.8.0. 514-446-7125.

WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS in Rodney Vilage II. Call
morelnlormation.

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
• • OUR T~!!-:!'~~

1 =BER

Real Estate General

1391

'

..·.

.

.

vour .
chance to own
frontage at Blue
Lake plus a 2 bedroom weft maintained mobile
home with deck and tots ol shrube and Irati. 3
lots, 1Yo car garage, picnic shelter, 2
one ·
mie from rivar. See it today I

NEW usriNa' iNYINTONililt.i.At:iE
nice one story brick home with 2 bedrooms,
bath, dinlnQ room, living room, laund7 ana
equipped kitchen harawocd floors.. car
attached garage. Walk-in attic. Nice back ·
ana l-shaped covered front porch.
$50s.

Real Eatatt General

..
53 ACRE FARM - On Rt. 160 on edge at
Vinton County with old brick homo and mobile
homo. Thirty-two acres tillable with bam and
other buildings. Asking $74,500.
1311
FARM IN HARRISON TWP. - 148 acres
with 4 bedrooms, 1 bath home. Vinyl aided With
newer kitchen wilh walnut cabinets, sawmill
and other equipment go with farm. Don't dei!ly.
Only $70,000.
l36t
124 ACRE Mil FARM - located on Uncotn
Pike and this ranch style vinly sided home with
4 bedrooms, 2 baths, lamiy room, dining room
and kitchen fireplace, 36x48 approx. barn, new
fences ,' tobacco base, some impl~ments .
Asking $69,900. Call lor your appo1n~ment
today.
·
MERCERVILLE AREA - Is this 3 bociroom
home altuatod on 1 acre with county water,
g&amp;IBga, 2 walk-in clcaata and laundry. All lor
$26,600. CaN today.
1400_
BUi.AVILLE PIKE - Is this 2 bdrm. home witM
bath, kitchen, large living room and laundly,
heat with natural gas, wood or coal, full
basement, 2 car detached garage and 16'x20'
building. All on over 2 acn~o. Low 30's.

mn

tnn

~1

TIRED OF RENTING? - Buy this 2 bedroom
home with LP' gas floor furnace, vin~l siding,
and .4 ot an acre mil. Ready to move onto after
you cur the gn1ss. You will want to take a look
at th~ one.
1380
CLOSE IN - $25,000 will buy tHis 2-3 bedroom
homo with panial basement and detached
garage. Call today:
. ... _
1121~
VACANT LAND - 4 acres of undeveloped
residential land !a,_Jackson County bordering
A"ppaiachtan Highway.
•
1374
CLAY- sC.HOOL ~ 3 bedroom, family ioom.
elec. heat, attached gan~go, with opener, all on
.5 ....... mil. Tool shed. Immediate possession.
See h today.
1382
UPCREEK ROAD - 67 acres mn.
building sitas. Rural water available.
dmber. Road frontage . Call for
Information.

.

NEW LISnNG - Located on Sycamore Slnlet
in Middleport. Ranch home with 3 bedrooms,
tevellotwlth above ground pool. Only $27,500.

2

1 Yatr Old Angus Bull, $550.

614-256-6315.

71

..

COUNTRY sETTING FOR THIS A FRAME HOME ~ 3.
bedrooms, living room, family room, bath located on 2.5;
acros. Green-Gallipolis school district. HURRYII CALL
TODAY FOR APPOINTMENT.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

1807 evenrngs.

1376

gan~ge

Rat Tarrier pupplts, lnsldt or

63

NICE HOME -In Pomeroy. Thia home was buitt
in tha 1940's and shows tho character and
quality of the eo:a Four badrooms,·larga living
room, dining room, full basement with drive-in

-;~~=;~$46,000.

Happy • Jack
Trlvarmlclde:
Recognized 11ft 6 effective by
U.S. Center far Ve111lnary
Medicine •gains! hoOk, round, I
tapeworms In dogs &amp; cats,
available 0-T.C at R &amp;G Feed &amp;
Supply, 614-992-2164
paranta

81

n1ptacomont

wind"'"•·

t:arptntry. bv AI Tromm, 814--742-

Home
Improvements

2321. CALL COLLECT

And Hut-

MEIGS COUNTY PROPERTIES

· HNIIoriBroker-448-0971

Fish Tank, 2413 Jackson Ave.
Polnl Plfannl, 304·675·2063,
full line Tropical lish 1 birds,
small animals and suppltes.

prtmltll, 614"-.396-1079 or 614·
!93-6429111YI mttlage

vinyl

Dec. 21, 1111

614-446·3844 o«er 7 p.m.

Happy Jack Mange lotion,
promotes hilling and hair
growth to any manga, hoi apot,
or fungus on dogs &amp; horses
wlthouf Cortisone, R 1: G
Supply, 4~4-992·2~64

&amp; 4 WD's

Meigs Co. Agent
Eve. 742·3171

C. Wood~-.ReaMor/Broker-446-4523

614·446-

NORTH PRODUCE"'.

Vina

"oom •ddltlont, tld.lng, roOfing,

CHERYL L. LEMLEY

446·1066

Oragonwynd Callery Persian,
Slamtst and Himalayan kl11tns.

O~ mp

Complllo Mobile.Homo !lti·Upo,
Rapalro; Commarlt:~l, Rnldln·
Holiday Salol 1189 Nlaoan I&gt;U Ripley, wV. 304-372-3933 oi 1· !lot tmprovomanto. lneludlng:
SUM; liN ~~ 0.110 PU 600-273-6585;
Plumbing, Eloclllcal. lnouronco
$3,511; 1N7 fori! F-150 PU'
Clalmo Acclptod. tl4-21f·1111.
Two
u
T~umpll
~ln11.
10
$3,2M; IIIII Mazda PU $3,.1N;
11M Chov. 1-10 Auto PU $3,515; Ford Flathead, V-8. 12.5122.5 CUrtil Home lmpunern.nl•:
liN Chov. 8-10 Bta11r 13,2N; Tlrao And Whooto AI $35. 814- V114ro bporllnco On ~ l
Nowor Hon;ao. Room ·AddHiont,
· 1Dill OIIC .Hmmy Btaar 13,215· 386-eOOB.
Foundlllon W0011, Roofl!!ll,
IBBJI Fotd Bronoo II $3,016· 18M
Kllohona And lathe. Frao Ej;
S.1~ AU!• PU $1,795; 1VM 8·10 79
tlmtt•t Alfertnoter 'No Job T~
Ex~ Cab 11,711; 11114 Chov. S.IO
Big Or lmallti4-441.Q221.
$1,485; 1114 lronco· 11 S2,715;
IIIII Dolwun PU Auto Air,
SI.J!5.i.~- For. d 414 PU tt,BMj
Ron'• TV StrYice, ..,.icllliDng
I••J -c PU Nlca 11,511; 187o
In Z.n«h allo _..ICing• moot
Focil :lilT 4x4 ,... IIlii Ford
other brando. Houo0 calli, aloo
PU.UN: 1184 Fllfd PU llli615. B '
&amp; D. Auto Ball, Hwy 110 . 114·
10m1 lt&gt;DIIonce !IPIIro. WV
Serv1ces
44H81L
304-ll'lt-2311 .0 hlo 114-448-24~.

DIVII •
Slw·Vaa
S.Vice,
Gaoig11 Crook Rd. Pa~o, aupplln, pickup, and dol ivory..814448.0294.

IAGITIARIUS (HoY, 23-Dec. 21) Play II
amart today and function as the power
behind the 1C81118. Whet you hope to
ichleve can be II:COmpllshed by letting
otltttn think ll'alhelr Idea.

0593.

dog,

truck wh..ls, . r~dlatort,

32 Loculi Street, Ga'Jiipolla

Sizes. 1 112 Mile OUta 141,

outsldt

IA81MENT .
WATEIIPROOF!NO
Uncond~lonlll
llfol!motum!lhod.
guaran-- !~~:..:::..::::..::
IH.
LAelt roforancot
Froo •tmalll: Call ·callool 1· ·
11ot.m.oae, day or • · 82
Plumbing &amp;
~r aaaamont w.._
·HI!atlng
· Ca~ar'o Pluntblng ·
Fo.llrlh Inc! Plna
Oatllpollo, Ghlo
114-448-311111
Electrical &amp;
Refrlgera11on
R•dlmlll o1 commorolat
wiring, new Urvlee or repairs.

M!lllttr Ucenttd eltctrlcl1n.
Rld•nour Eltetrlc1l1 ~75·

1768.
87

U h 111

PRICE REDUCED TO $411,500
PLUS $1,600 HOLIDAY BONUS TO BUYER I

·
Very nice 3·4 bedroom home oftet'l more than moat in !his price range. Features
include oak kitchen cabinets, family room, living room, 2 full balha, deck. 1 car
garage, heal pump. Located In family oriented neighborhood in Green Schools.

.

'

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
446·3644

1206

Go~
Some
more
11210

SPRINGFIELD AREA- Hera's a home lor y/!6
wllh 2 bedrooms, living room, dining room,
kitchen, bath and utility room, two car garage.
Oil and wood heat. A• on over 72 acres. Call
tor your appointment.
1394
.. - - -..
RIO GRANDE AREA- 1680 sq. H. of living .
space in this 3 bedroom, 2 bath homo which
also has family rm., and lots ol other amenldes.
Watch the birds and squirrels as you relax in
your family room. All elec. Only $39,000. Call l
now lor appointment.
1346

-

'

: l:~;~:~' S©\\~}A-l££~s~

ON BUlAVILLE PIKE - Is this attractive vinyl
sided home wit~ bedrooms, 2 baths, large living room, dining area, kitchen and laundry, g~s
heat and central air, a 2 car carport wlloh. Pa~o
and storage buildi~&amp; . All this and more on
ever % acre priced on low 40's. Call lor your
appointment todll)l.
1398
122 ACRES MiL FARM - With tobacco base,
3 large bams, home has 4 bedrooms, living
room, dining and kitchen, 1\\ baths, Hannan
Trace Schools. $45,000.
1397
FARMmE - Two barns, a 3 bedroom, 2 bath'
homo comes with heat oumo and full
buenienr.-WIIk4n closets, 'ftat land with almost
1000' road frontage. 8.2 acres mil. Need to
see. Asking 153,200.
1395
RIO GRANDEA.lEA - Three tracts of land. (1)
22 acres mol; (2) 20 acres mil; (3) 100 acres ; or
buy all lhreo with 40x60 horse barn •. 14x60
Implement storage shed. All have road frontage
on Tyn Rhos Rd. Various pricas. Call lor mora
information.
•
1359
TWO HOMES IN ONE - Upper level has!
bedroomo, 1 bath, kitchen, dining room, living
room · lower level has 2 bedrO&lt;lms, 1 bath ,
livlng'room and dnlng area. For only '47,6011.
Owner will consider land contract.
13110
CHESHIRE AREA- 12.9 acres mn olvacant
land. Nor reslllcl8d. Has twa story bam . Soma:
limber and 700' road frontage on Story's Run,
Rd. Cd for detda. Aatdng $16,550.
11335 .

Circumstances you'll have lntle COIIIrOI
~ may cause change In the year
lhead, but you'll be the one who guldao
them tp deelrable fruition!. Things are
loOking up.
CAPRICORN IDee. 22.Jan. 1t) Your
frlendl might be leaning on you a bll
more than usual today, so be prepared
to IISIUme some of their burdens. For·
tunataly, however, lhey're nor apr to tar
anylhlng .on you you can't manage.
Know Where to took for romance and
you'll flnd II. The Alllro-Graph Match·
maker lnlllenlly reveals which signs are
romantically perfect for you. Mall $2
plus a tong, aetf·addr8581d, stamped .
envelope to Matchmaker, c/o this ·
~. P .O. Box 91428, Cleveland,
Oil'« 101·3428.
AQUARfUI lolan. 20--Ftb. 11) Don't be
overly concerned today If you suddenly
flnd yourself In some type of compel~ ·
live development. Challenges arouse
your wiH to win, and you'M lnsllnctlvety
know how to do so wilh grace.
PIICESIFtb. 2NI8rch 20) Profit from
your own Pill experiences Ieday. Doit't
fall biiCfc on a bad habftthat previOus!~
led you down a dead-«id street.
ARIES (.....h 21-Aprfl 111 You coold
be exc:epllonally keen In financial or
commercial matters today .. Some type
of gain ta lnalcaled, provided you use
your logic and Insights wisely.
TAUIIUSIAprii:ID-IIIoJ 20) Aloyal and
forceful fr;.t~d of yours wffl have some
good things Ia ..Y on your behalf to
others today. This pal's comments wilt
have Impact
GEMINI (MIJ 21-.lune 20) You're up ro
managing situations · today that you
would usually Shy away from. Get en
Nrly start because, H you apply yoursell, lhls could be a very productive day.
CANCER (.kiM 21.,ju1J ZZ) Members
of bolh genders are likely to flnd you •1
more appealing and popular today than
a !!'fend of yours who Is always subconsc:fouoty competing against you.
LEO l.luiJ 23-Aug. 22) You're bolter at
doing things for others toclay than you
are ar doing lhlngs for yourself. Perhaps
II'' because lhete noble Inclinations
repo-ntthe real you.
~(~Ill- :13:-hpl. 22) Your powers
of obeervatlon and· concenrrallon are
extremely acute today. Things which
will be apparent to you could be completely overtool&lt;od by those wllh whom
yoli'll usoc:late.
LIIRA (ltpl. 23-0cl. 23) Your proba·
blflttes for adding something Of value to
your re1011rces look good today. How...... you're going to have to assert
yourself lit order to acquire lt.
ICORPIO lOci. 24-Nov. 22) Be extra
coOntzanl Of your appearance and dem...ar today; you'll not go unnoticed
In a crowd. If you make a favorable lm·
-pression, It'll be a tasting one.

You may have many more Irons In the
fire In ,rhe year ahead than you have
ever had In the put. You'll be able to
keep !hem all hot at the same lime, too.
CAPRICORN (Dec. ZZ.Jan. 11) If there
Is an article Of foreign origin you've
been hoping to obtain, today Is the day
ro chectc all your sources that have access to Import/export situations. Malar
changes are ahead for Capricorn In the
oomlng year. Send for Capricorn's Astra-Graph predictions today. Mall $1.25
plus a long, seff·adar8118d, lltamped
envelope to Aetro-Graph, c/o lhls
newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland,
OH « 101·3428. Be sure to alate your
zodiac sign.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20--Ftb. II) Should
you be threatened by any type of chal·
lenge, don't endow n with strengths It
doesn't poS888S. In actuality, you're the
one who'll have the edge.
PISCES (Ftb.......h 20) Tact ilnd
consideration are your greatest 888818
today; they can be used very elfOCIIvely
In your Involvements. Instinctively,
you'll know how to please others.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll11) A favorable
change that· could aHeet your career
might begin Ia stir at this lime. II wilt
have deflnlle advantages, although !hey
may take a while to become apparent.
TAURUS (Aprfl20-llo!J 20) A closer relationshiP could be esrabllahed today
wnh an Individual you already know, but
with whom you have more In common
than you realize. This association will
become otgnl!lcant.
GE...I (MIJ 21-.lune 20) You are
pr-11~ under favorable aspects
where your earning potential Is con·
oern8d. St~rt lool&lt;lng In earnest for
ways to Increase your Income.
CANCER IJune 21-JufJ 22) Unaerptay
your presence In SQ!:Iat situations loday
Instead of trying to call attention Ia
yourself. like the biblical wedding .
guest, "lhe last Shall be first." .
LEO l.lufJ 23-Aug. ZZ) Measures can be
takon today to contribute to your material well-being. There are several oppor·
1unltill hov.lng about you at this lime,
but It'll be up.to you ro recOgnize lhelr
worth.
VIIQO (Aug. 23-llept. ZZ) You're very
charfamatlc today and likely ro be assertive In a rather attracllve way. Your
demeanor coota inspire others to try to
emulate your behavior.
•
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22) People who
like you are willing to do things lor you
at this time that could be meaningful In
material ways. Be bolh recapllve and
graleful regaralng the suggestions they
offer.
·SCORPIO (OcL 24-Nov. 22) Your prob·
abilities for fulfilling your hopes and expectallona, both malerlally and socially,
lOok very good today, provlaed you use
your giHs as a friendly, pragmatic
visionary.
SAQITIARIUS (Nov. ZZ,Dec, 21) Two
valuable assels are working for you In
your financial and career Involvements
today. One Is your ability to make togl·
cal assessments, !he other Is your ae&lt;:u·
rate siKih sense. Use both.

'

WOlD
&amp;AMI

Edllod by CU.Y R. POLLAN .

0 words
Rearrange the 6 scrombled
'
below to make 6

1

2 YEARS OLD - 1 story vinyl sided 2
bedroom, .1 bath with full basement, gas hoat,
large_L-sbaoed deck. $18,500.
.
1243 .
POMEROY AREA -Character. style, country
charm. This homo has II all. Older home,
completely ralurbished. 3 bedr_
ooms . 2 .baths.
Wrap-around porch. Several buildings. Situat&amp;ll
on approx. 1 and 112 acres. Rock Spnnga
Road. Asking $59 ,500. Will take MH lor :~n
payment.
.
.•
. HEW LiSTING - Sumner Ra. is this n_
iee 2
bedroom 1 bath ranch with aluminum Sldong,
living room, kitchen, lamlly room, lui bsement,
woodburner, one car garage, and more on..84
of an aero mil. Asking only $40,000. Call lor
~fo .
~
MUST SEE - Eastom schools, 3 bedroomo,
1v.! belha , family room, extra good condition.
On appiOK. 2 acn~s. ASking $&lt;16,000.
1314
MAlN ST., RUTLAND -Is this attractive 3 badroom ranch with bath, kitchon, dining room, and
living room, 2 car attached garage, fireplace,
gas heal Central air. Only $45,500 .
1403
ST. Rt 124, LONG BOTIOM - Is this 2 bodroom ranch on 1 acre ·mil wilh living room,·
kitchen, beth: Open deck and mon~. Asldng
$25,000. CaU todoy.
1380

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

l~:-::-::~p~o-::;;~e:-:ry:....:...-,MO¥rray'o Uphototoring Hrvk:·
lng Ill counly arao 28 YHII. Thl

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE

PH. 446·7699 or 446•9539

b1ii1t In tumnure up~tterln;.
Call 304-878-4184 lor il'ao ...
llmltH.

Real Estate General

CJ/~
.. . ·9!,
(F . ~ . ~n~

Real Estate General

Q/?N/L f7dd7S~.~

.Real Estate General

PROFESSI~~R!:.r:!~.!:FERENCE
DIAN CALlAHAN, REALTOR.II.UIOI
EUNICE NIEHM, REALTOR, -11V7
AIITH BARR, REALTOR. 44U72:i
DEioMH I CITES, REALTOR, 141 111011
LYMD4 FRALE"' REAL TOR, Ctc flO&amp;
MICHAEL MILLER, REALTOR,111 8101
PATRtaA ROSS, REALTOR, 245-1575

RESIDENTIAL.·INVESTM!'NTS ·COMMERCIAL· FARMS

23 LOCUST ST•..
446-6806

Dec.30,1ft1

614-667-3404.

Sunday Tlmea-Sentlnei-Page-07

Home

floor mett ttc. D I A Auto,

Wishing You A Prosperous New

$200., ready ·Jan. 15, taking

Wayne

ton

814-~111&amp;1 ~vanlnfll!.

18M Ford R._ sTx. 4.whool
dril(o. I3200.1-I-G731.
·

B• Placldl614446-8111.

shedding,

liN Chovn&gt;lal Scottdalo 360,
Auto, low Mlill, Garo;e Kopl. Now gaa hlnl!o, body pa~a. ona

7 . ~eng•r, nl~. cond, 14,900,
m~ offer. :104-878-11306.

AKC Chocolate Labrador Pup·
pita, Bnullful, 6 Weaks Old,
S~ott And Wormed. Ready To

n9n

81

•

WV

Improvements

1988 ~g• CaraVan·LE, loaded,

Groom and Supply Shop-Pat
Grooming. All .breeds, styles.
lams Pet Food Oaalar. Julia
Webb. Call 614-446.0231.

Mlnalure

Home

81

73!

Pets tor Sale

AkC

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

1

Supplies

56

29, 1991

''·

130.00.

55 .

December

1
r.C'c!t.~~·.';:la
"""1,·"t•tfi+
::;~:::;:..:~:-:-:::-:==
Dod~o Bhodow ES
; 1117

hault, 614·H2·1236, tVInlnp

Janu,ary

wv

--

iiii

tm.~

_,··~~:A
.._,'

..

.

'

17W. OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS AOAIN - UNDER
PRICED AT $31,1100 - own your own homo, 3
r bectm., VI!YI ronch dosolo lown, 1~ baths, L.R, kit,
dn. ..... iultbaM..nt w/4nns. Fanity nn. ond 1~
bath down wlh 'out aide enlry. Owner wori&lt;s on car&gt; In
26'x32'- wired lor 220 etec. ownor Slid "oel."

Gas!&gt;.-.

t734. FHA- PRICE
poymonl $315.17 mo. FARMER HOME lOAN can move yu Into thlo ho..,
With vooy IIIII money.' owner wtllallo a moblte homo

1

for part payment DeiUJce doublewtde, master

bedroom, wMh balh, lainlly.bath, 3 btdrms., lonmal
. ~I'"IJ, loa&lt;*! ol plna cablnels. 1 car garage;

s..,..

buy.

buyl '

'·
- FHA-VA, a vwy nice 3
. bedrm., bath, country. kit., lR and tamNy rm.
w~lioptace. 1 ac. nVI. $45,000. R~ B. Rd.

. ·..-r
n3o.

EXCEl.LENT APARTMENT BlDG.
VESTMENT: GOod mo111y maker IN TOWN. Lorve
apl. bldg. wHh 3 two bedroom apls.; 2 one btdrm.
apia, plus a cottage with two aparlmenta. T,.
properly haas been wei malnlalned. Reduoad prloe.
. r

.

WITH

condftlon. 3 Mdnnl.. 1 ~
with WOO&lt;I&gt;urntng llreptaco,
Thll hOmo II wo1 .-tor and loclllad oonvonlont~
10 1own and .llhoppilg. Vwy good gordon opot. 1 cor •
ganiiJII. You hove no ldodl- a ntct homo unlll

y011-

- ·MAllE OFFER.

FOUR.~~~~~~~E~~=

ranch home
1712.

completed aslollows: new Thermo
securly dool'l, sleet siding, heavy root , kH., ceramic
tile 8ntry eKtendtd _Into the kitchen, 16x53 deck,
· · cement watks and pad . See !his home and stop·

lootclng elsewhere.
1750. HANDYMAN SPECIAl - MAKE OFFER. l.and
contrad. Y011'Hgo bod&lt; n II... II you liven lhb large
2 siOIY homo, 3 bednns., balh, kll., dining nn., ulllly
rm .. cetar. Bam w!approM. ~ of an acm. $26,000 . .

. ,ji,'

charm galore.
lhls3btdrri!.

Thl

ranch. Cozy flfeptace In L.A. Nice cablnelsln kllchen.

,Low

~

heal, patio, 2 car g~r~ga ,

Pretllest corner lot .whh rail lance

stwubs ard trees.

MW oulbulldlng.
~ some new

·

1

t14i, MIDDLEPORT ANYONEi $21,000 ~ Will buy

!hlo e•cepllonally nice 3 btdrm ., 111 baths, 2 IIOIY •
home. lovely ntw Carpet, rBilgt) washer and dl')et",
t ~ car gartge. Ntat ·•nd dean homa k)cattd 507

Sycarr-oroSI.
·
1732. BARN l VACANT LOT - 78 ac. 11&gt;1 allmiwoat
riQhll, I ac. ol bonom lond. aomo na1 on lop ollhl
hill. Owner wll1 land contract 10 qualified buyer.

$23,500.

·1731. NEW LISTING. TREES,' TREES, AND MORE
TREESII.I2•acros m.1. Also 2 BR hOmo wlgreal room,
IINPIICO, tclchen, bath, paflo lind nlct bllcl&lt;yard.

LIITINQ, ROOM TO ROAM 4 BR oounlry
wlh L.R, FR, 01-ln klk:hln, 01\, balh, Ulll.
nn., ~ baMmont. Plenly ot tMng space • uaa ao you
dlolre.lg. bam. Althll on 2 acs. mn.

•

1711. NEW LISTING, SPIC AND SPAN. Llko naw
11188 SchUlz 14'x7a Mobile Home wlh 3 BA's, L.R,

17:11. MARK Of' QUALITY: Dl!llncllve and &lt;lnererw 3
bodroom, bl-level wl1h 3 balhs, L.A. FA Wlh flreptace ,
ldlchtn (with chorl\' cablnots) dlnetlo, ·~ - heal
pump, CIA, rei., range, dishwasher, disposal ,

ktlchen w/diMHt, 2 b•lhs, utH. nn. Alae 8'Jxl0' uti.

llklg. YDII'IWM!Io -lhll boa!lly. Call.

1741. NEW LilTING. STOP DREAMING IIIIIMIIIhl
want to own and lake a look all hi quail·
ly bull3 DR ranch wl1h LA, eal·n kHellin, FA w~lre·
pface, 2 bllha, 2112% car garage, new root, 3/4 IC.
pond on 25 acre, nv1. Beautiful setting. Call tor more
Into.

: simple words. Print !elfers ol
: each In Its line of squores.

screened-In back porch, 2 car garage on "' aues mtl.

properly you

'

-

~- Take a look 11 qually. Cal

111&amp;. REDUCED $3,000, WARM AND FRIENDLY b
wllal y011 wllllnd lhll3 BR linCh lo bt wlh l.R, klehen, wliln. .,.., range, ret .. 1 ~ baths, etec. BB heat

t714. COMPlETED NOWI2 BR RANCH, 1 balh, L.R

With lining aru, aat·n klchtn localed on 42 acros
MA. on Soonle Dr. In M&lt;llgan Twp. Clll.

ale, fnlllm.,, patio and carport. Cal lor mcM"elnlo.

1727. NEW LISTING. Vacant land - 151Cn!S MA.Itat
to IVIIng In ncallanl location. Cal ...

•

;~~H;..;I_C:.,..::C:...O;-::E~-1~
7
6

:'

t117. . .ACIOUS

DOUILEWHIE ranch Wl1h 3 DR,
L.R, DR, 1111. - r. range, ror.. !g. Iron! porch, bade
dtdc, - hNI P11111'· CIA, 2 car garage, 2 cer car-

Tha fellow was amazed that
I I I 1 most of the people didn't know
1--1.-L
L-.l..
. ....J..--1.1.-.1 the punch lines to most of the
.
Jokes he was telling. Finally he
.
'
RELAWK
heard someone say that the
•'
nice thing about telling a clean
8 9
I
••• •
joke Is that there's a good
chance no one has ......... It ......... .
•

-"•

B R' A V.E L

•'

I0

'

•
•

•

p
'

12 ·l'l
Complete the thuckle quoted
by ltllin, In the mlsslnf words
you develop rom step No. below.

Q

pool on 1 oc. 11&gt;1. $4ll.

1110.
2 or 3 btdroom, t
bllh, living room, tamtly room, utei!He dlah wl1h

oqu_......$40,000.

fllldl _ _ ,. .

-·

'-mont.

..
.,..... on o.tl8 aao m.t. OWnerand
wtt ttrade

101 iiOm.~lliiilt """'*Y·

Mit. NEW LISTING: Thll homolllocaled on 1 aC.
m.t -~ 2 or 3 - w111 llmtry room, ldtcnCIIIIOII. ' - • - b-.g. This
homo II• ¥ - n t - - prlold .. tho 130'1.
CalliDf .... tnt-..
. 1710. 30 ACRE FARM MIL with tooaoco bllt and
blm 2 llory- houll with~ bodrooiM, balh, lv·
tna ,;,..,, utHy room. Cal tor pilot and -ion.

an,-·......,...

1M2. QUALITY- LOCATION- -CE -ouatly Is In
tho br1c1&lt; Clpa Cod homo lhalhu a rrlandlr homo
1769. COMIII!ACIAL 8UIOINQ...home ... lpall•
1111101flhorl. lliHIUIOI 4 bodrooma, 2 baths, Mlllng
. mont....all ol thll In one bundle ot raal · Thll
room wtlh ilrlf&gt;llCI, olac. hill p....- ond contnl air.
.,._rtw 1a 'iocaled on •
with hav- ..
Awn&gt;&lt;- 18011 oq. ft . l.ocoUon II ovoltoofltng lhl Ohio
Inti
the
....
boundllry. l'lltl home .... "'""'
Rtvor and a torgo IDa type body ol wllor "*'"'ng
,.........•• .. - -. lltllurao '
-rty boundlriiL Spaoollo 38x48 mota! building. '-.,"i 3
BR, ,,. bath, tamtry room, b._nt w~lreplace,
Poi1tc:t ror aomiOI&gt;~Ihlt hoe • bullnHiand - a
loll o1 11or111J11 ona. n faaturoo a 2 BR, 1 blln
otarpllorlglaroa. Pluta 14x2&lt;1 building lhll muld 1
--" 1 2 cat giraga. Call lor on - " ""
bi-IOf I anowroom Of I lrMII
Call lor
- , ... """-. . too ..

-lot

---

"'*""'"'·

�•
. '
Page-:0~-Sunday

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasanl, wv

Times-Sentinel

Why ·should .pessimism
surprise Bush, Greenspan?

I

&lt; '

·-

By JOHN CUNNII"F' .
AP Business Analyst
.· · ·
NEW YORK ·-Why should economic pessimism be so much
deeper lhan lhe b'aditional economic statistics would seem to justify?
. .
.
.
Both President Bush and Alan Greenspan, the Federal Reserve
chairman, have expressed lheir inability"to fully comprehend lhe
reasons·ror rampant pessimism.
"I haven't really been able to son out exactly why !here has
been this degree of pessimism," the President .said last week.
Wee.ks earlier, Greenspan referred to· concern deeper lhan he had
ever seen.
·
·
Some possibilities:
-Government and many private economists are relying on
methodology .d~vised to ·measure cyclical recessions, but not the
structural recess ton n.ow under way.
They are measuring something, perhaps accurately, but it might.
not be lhe consumer economy. Considepng the condition of their
balance sheet~ an'd their concerns earlier this year, consumers .
couldn't have led a recovery.
. .
.
The intensity ·or cyclical recessions and recoveries is measured
by month to month, quarter to qllll!'ter and year to year changes in
·gross.production and olher economic data, such as business inventories and officii\~ unemployment.
Structural recessions, far rarer, involve fundamental changes in
lhe makeup or the economy. Debt today is very high; taxes are too.
Home values have fallen. Job insecurity probab)y hasn't been higher since the Great Depression.
Confidence has been eroded by lhe financial problems at what ·
had been viewed as unshakable American institutions. Banks and
insurers have gone under. Massive layoffs have occurred in manufacturing, government, teaching.
·
Rather lhan criticizing the dark consumer mood and seeking to
dismiss it as an aberration, economists might have been more realisiic to recognize it as ·a more important ·economic factor and included
· it in their analyses.
•
·
. - "Consumers are no doubt distressed by the mixed messages
and genera! sense of incompetence emerging from Washington."
That comment was made in a speech by economist and porfolio
manager John Wright in an address Dec. 19to the New York Society of Security Analysts.
.
.
"Despite seriously adverse eeonomic trends, there was little.
se_nse of urgency in the halls or Washington until the November
1991 elections," said Wright, chairman or Wrightlnves!ors Service, Bridgeport, Conn. .
·
·.
·- Many or the profession31 economists and linancial forecasters
who bring lheir work before the public didn't see !he recession
coming, denied.it was here, said it would end quickly and prematurely declared il over.
·
A few examples:
..
On Aug . 1, the National Bureau of Economic Resear~h
announced lhat "According to the. NBER Experimental Rec~ion
Index (XRI), the pf&lt;?bability lhal the economy will be in a. recession
in December 1991 ... is I percent."
·
. · •
·on Oct. 9, Edward Yardeni, popular chief economist of C.J .
Lawrence securities, suited: "We expect that real GNP will increase
by about 2 percent per quarter from lhe fourth quarter of this. year
through the end or next year."
· .
.
.
· "On Nov. 27, he recast liis forecast. "We now expect that real
GNP growth will be somewhere between zero and minus 2 perQent
during lhe fourth quarter and the ftrSl halfof 1992.'' ,
Con(i!lence, says economist William Dunkelberg, deijn of Temple University's School of Business, "may lie·in a deeper'recessiqn
than the real econOf!IY. which grew 1.8 percent in the third qlllirter."
Maybe, it has been suggested by critics, economists should
. include more consumer input in their measwemerits.

December 29,

199~

·orange qu_ota under ·fir.e, again .
· "·

attempt by USDA, acting under a 'million cartons, out of an estimated
By JENNIFER DIXON '
,1937 law; to. ensure the orderly crop or 64.6 million canons.· ·..
AP Farm Wrlter
WA.SHINGTON --;- Shipping marketing of the .oranges, a fair'
the·so-ealled qbota, the aliiai-.ce
limits o~ this year~s California-Ari- return to "ewers and reasonably claims, wiU keep more than 2 bilzona navel orange crop could drive priced frun for consumers, Haley lion edible oranges off t~e tables Qf
up retail·prices by $250 million and said.
· U.S. consumers, and raise the price
"One side argues that con- at the grocery stoie· for those that
keep 2 billion oranges off U.S. grocery store shelves, says an alliance sumers are hun," Haley said. "The are sold by $250 million,
or farmers opposed to the market- other side says that without the
The quota is also 21 percent
order, they'd be hurt. It's a debate below the record consumpllon level
ing order.
·
But !he Mministrator of the that's raged on some 20 years. and reached during 1989,90, the
Agricultwe Department's Agricul- this is just one side taking their ·alliance said.
tural Marketing Service, Daniel Christrnastime opponunity to get
Haley, however, refused to conHaley, says this year's orange ship- some headlines." •
firm llle group's numbers, saying
The. Farmers Alliance for they .have ·been inaccurate or mis- .
ments haven't even hit lhe USDAimpo~ed ceiling, adjusted on a Improved Regulation, or FAIR, leading in the past
. .
contends that USDA has limited
weekly basis.
·
''The quotas injure both conThe marketing orjlers are an the domestic fresh sale of Califor- sumers and farmers," said' FAIR
nia-ArizoM navel orange's to 45.65 . cpordinator Jim Moody. "We are
.
.
.

all forced to pay more for scarce
oranges kept off the market by a
government-sanctioned cartel. For
the .USDA to allow such pricegouging, especially hai-mful to the
poor and lhose on fixed incomes, at
a time of economic stress simply ·
can hot be justified." ·
·· ·
Scott PattiSon, executive direc.
tor of Consumer Alen, said it is
"gross hypocrisy" for the USDA
age.!ICY to both ban oran~es from
lhe market and drive up pnces.
·
"We are giving billions in food
aid to recently liberated Commu; ·
nists while at the same time keep·
in~ food off American tables," he ·
satd.
·

0. D. Comments

Estate planning necessary·process
ments, taxes and insurance. How. ever, are .all factors considered?
Multi-generation farms are in conGALLIPOLIS -Harvest is over, stant transition. Goals or older and
workloads are lighter,, schedules younger generations are closely
are less hecuc - thts mtghl be the 1dentical, yet very different
Dad and mom see the farm as
best time or the year for family
members to have a serious discus- security. They built an operation
that has allowed them to raise a
sion.
.
Estate planning is a necessary family, and put something aside.
process. Fkrmers examin~ real Using the farm's fixed assets, they
can plan for later years. Holding on
esta~e. assets, machinery, in_~estBy KIM HARLESS
Farm Bureau

to what they have is the key. As
managers, dad and mom used their
talents and interests to custom
design their operation. They want
to remain a vital pan of the farm,
but they need to give their son or
daughter more opportunities to
assume responsibility for its success. ·
The san-or daughter sees the
farm as security. He or she plans to
build an operation lhat will provide

-Study shows median values
off 11.5 percent in 10 _years
CLEVELAND CAP) - An ll .S
percent overall drop in median
home. values in Ohio niflects the
state's·economic situation, said a
researcher who analyzed Census
Bureau data on home prices. ·
The· lower . median prices
amount· to lost equity for sellers,
but .the buyer gets a better deal,
said George C. Zeller, a researcher
_with the Council for Economic
OpP,Ortunities in Greater Cleveland.
"lf ~oulive in New Jersey and
want to live in Ohio,_you can get a
lot or good housmg for less
money," qe ·said Thursday. "It's
good.for buyers llut bad for sell-

ers."
The lost val~e "is ail inaicator
of' poor economic performance,''
said Zeller, adding that many Ohio
counties with the hi~hest poverty
·rates also had the b1ggest loss in
median home values.
Thy same factors that mean
more poverty also cause home
prices to dip, he said.
"When you have a big job loss,
there's less money circulating in
the county. People can't afford to
buy a_home, dernl!"d drops off and
the pnce declines, 'he satd.
The median value of an owneroccupied home in Ohio declined

from $71,770 in 1980 to $63,500
last year, said the council, which
analyzed census figures as part of
its annual survey on- poverty in
Ohio.
·
The only county to 'show an
increase was Delaware County, just
north of Columbus, where the
median home value jumped 9.8
percent, going from $87,366 in
1980 to $95,900 in 1990.
The biggest decline was in Marion County, which borders
Delaware County on the nor.th. The
med1an home value there dropped '
30.3 percent, falling from
in 1980 to $42,500 in

for a growing family, and put.
something aside. Using lhe farm's
fixed assets, he or she can plan for
the future. Expanding to meet new .
demands is the key. As managers; :
he or she wonders if the farm is'
equipped to meet his or her pnoduc, '
tion interests. The son or daughter .
wants the parents to be a vital part
of the operation, but he or she
needs more opportunities to assume
responsibility.
Want to complicate things? Add
more family members. What happens when the parents are in partnership with ~n uocle or more than
one child is involved in the operation? What consideration should be
given to children living off the
farm? Splitting up the operation
and letting lhose interested auempt
to buyout those off ihe farm ca~
cripple an operation as quiclcly as a
poorly constructed will.
Decisions on managing assets,
running the operation, providing
security to survi.vors and giving all
heirs equil.llble inheritance cannot
be left to guesswork. Honest and
frank communication between all
family members !needed.
The holiday season gives many
an opponunity to visit with all fam- ·
ily members. If you haven't had
lhis conversation in a while, plan to
have a fantily meeting on the matter.

·Military should b.e . ~sed to.
assist Russians, lawmaker says
WASHINGTON (AP)- An
Iqwa lawmaker Just back from
Moscow says President Bush

· Market.•.
Continued rrom D·l
Performance
While the equity market was
making some progress towards re~
covery early last week, lhc Federal
Reserves cut in the Discount Rate
Friday was greeted initially with
skepticism.
·
Following the announcement,
stocks opened moderately higher on
huge volume. Almost 100 million
shares were traded'on the New York
Stock Exchange in lhe first half how'
of trading. Volume of lhat magnitude with little gain suggested investors wanted . io "sell. on the good
news"- a phenomenon that has been
prese~t most of lhis year. Ho111ever,
as has consistently been the case lhis
ydlr, the good news was generally
followed by other good news, result. inginevcn higher stock prices. Much
· can be said about the market's performance on .Friday. When selling
p~ure abated, stocks f11'111ed and
closed nicely higher at the close.
Friday's breadlh was its best in
several weeks. We are encouraged
~Y this improvement as it suggests
that equities, at least for the time
being, have seen their lows for lhis
current "selling squall". The Dow
Utility Average moved sharply higher
on the Federal Reserves rate cut.
Given the abundance of liquidity in
the economy currently, we expect
small cap stocks to continue to pace
equity perfonmance.
[Mr .. Evans Is an Investment
Broker ror The Ohio Company in
their Gallipolis omc:e.]

should use the U.S. milita(y io
begin moving desperately needed
food assistance, including meat and
baby formula, into the Soviet
re'publics.
Rep. David R: Nagle, D-Io.wa,
said the republics don't need U.S.
wheat, which the Agriculture
Department recenily said they
would be putchasing with ,U.S.
credit guarantees. Instead, he said
Monday, lhey need meat, particularly pork; baby food, dairy products and proteins such as dry edible
beans.
"The only coarse grain they
need is corn to feed' their livestock," said Nagle, who returned
to Iowa - a major pork and com
producer- Sunday after a week in
Moscow and areas to the soulh.
Nagle said he would urge the
president to speed up the relealit of
$650 million in credit guarantees,
which are now scheduled to be·
made available in allocations of
$200 million each on Feb. 1 and
March 1, and $250 million on April
1.
The credits are part or a $1.25
billion package authorized last
month by Bush. The first $600
became operational immediately.·
The Agriculture Department said
the credits would be used to buy
$495 million in wheat and $338
million in feed grains, wilh the rest
for protein meals, soybeans, vegetable oils, hops, almonds and
freight.
Nagle said the republics requested the wrong foodstuffs and the
Bush administration failed to offer
more ready-to-eat foods such as
meats and dairy products.
Nagle suggested the United .
States use its military to move
ready-to-eat food to the Soviets,
and that the Soviets' use their military to help distribute the aid.

"'"'

ICifY
CHAIII
ICIIIFE
Stlinllss
steel.
IK718KC.

PtRuiL.

run

IIIJifCTOII
CLU.IIIfR

Promotes maximum
~ngine Bfficiency.
12 oz. IAFI-12P.

3"111110
lllfGISTRAriOII

HOLHII

Ctips·on llisor.I433371150X.

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FRlfiH·

TROUII&amp;.&amp;'
SfiOTUGHT
12' cord wffh hang

KHpS vehiCleS
smelling fresh.
Assorlmenl or
scents available.

clip: Plugs Into
ciQar&lt;ffellghler.
195558.

LOCIC

DOOR
EDOlf

Dlf·ICER
1718 (Jf8S5Ufl

lnjlclion spray
thaws frozen locks
quickly.

II'OT

IIIIIROII

Pf!Jvi/Jes es~nl~l will6 angle
vifw. IC03M1 113.

....

!"-•.&gt;

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentlnel~ews StaiJ
The latest ~uempt to restore the ..
Reedsville voun~ precinct has been
reJeCted · th1s lime by Republican
Secretary of Sta~ Bob Taft.
The ~nd ue vote on the issue
of restonng lhe precinct was subm1t~d to Taft for consideration followmg the December 12 meellng
of th.e Meigs County Board of
Elections. At that meeting, Board
Chauman Evelyn Clark vacated the
chau and made a motion that .the
"South Ohve precin~t be divided
and agam be Reedsvtlle and Long
Bottom precmcts."
Clark's motion was seconded by

her fellow Republican on the
board, Henry Wells, with the
board's Democrats, Mary Hunter
and. John !hie voting against the
m011on. The ue .vote was .then sent
to Taft for a deciSion. That decision
was recetyed by the board on Monday mommg.
Old issue
The re-drawn. lmes of the present "So~th Olive" precinct have
been an tssue between the board
and several Reedsville residents
s~nce the Reedsville precinct was
dtssolved in ~ebruary, ~989.
At that t1me, .poruons of the
Reedsv11le precmct were combined
with lhe Long Bottom and Olive-

..............-...

,.,.,...,.,.,...
.....
...... . ...,.,-,.,..,.;
............
._..,.,,. .......,...,
1111 ~,.,.,,. ................ M

...

............... ,111111: ....... ,.....,

J

Dale precincts to form the South
Olive and North Olive precincts.
The RClC(Isville voting precinct was
one of several smaller precincts in
the cot~nty to be dissolved or combinedat that time. ·
The reasons cited for combining
the smaller precincts were cost savings, accessibility and safety and
convenience of the voting public.
Several angry residents in the
former Reedsville precinct formed
the "Committee to Restore the
Reedsville Voting Precinct" in an
attempt to reverse the board's decis1on.
In August, 1990, a tie vote identical to that or December 12 was

sent to former Secretary of State
Sherrod Brown for a decision. (A
different tie-vote was also sent to
Brown prior to lha~ concerning the
proposal of moving the South
Olive polling place to Riverview
School, which Brown rejected.)
Brown also upheld the boa~d's
February, 1989 decision.
Tart's decision
According to Taft's decisions,
the board's decision to combine
those smaller precincts in the county has already begun to pay off.
"The board's action in reducing
the number of precincts resulted in
a savings of several thousand dolIars," Taft's decision says, "allow-

ing for the upgrading of balloting
systems, as well as allowing the
board..to provide a safer, cleaner
and more accessible environment at
the remaining two precincts."
Taft's decision continues: "The
record is clear that the board, in
rendering its unanimous decision in
February or 1989, reviewed ... the
(necessary) factors of voter accessibility, costs to lhe board for main·
taining unnecessary precincts, fitness and safely or polling places, ·
goographic lllcation and lhe populati~ or nwnber. of registered voters m each precmct. There ts evtdence with respect to the costs savings achieved by the board from

President Bush begins
12-day trade mission
ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE
(AP) - President Bush embarked
for Australia and Asia today on a
12-day hard-sell mission for American goods, pledging to tell Pacific
allies that "free trade is a two~way
street."
"lf we want to put people to
work here at home, we've got to
expand trade and to open markets," the president said as he
. boarded Air Force One f6r the journey to four nations.
Alth.ough initially pl~umed ll!l a
goodwtlltour, the trips miSSIOn .
was recast as the .u.s. econom!c
recovery f~ltered and' as Bush s
aJli!I:Oval raungs plunged. .
Let ~e ll!~e ve~y clear .the
f.ocu_s ~fthiS blp. My highestl!nor·
tly ts J~bs. I want.us to bu1ld .a
foundauon for susta.med economtc
growth and an .ever-mcreasmg _supply of f:?Od JObs. for Amen can
workers, Bush satd m a pre-dawn
departure statement at Andrews Air
Force Base ~uts1de Washmgton. . ·
The pres~dent contends that each
$1 btll~on m new ·exports means
20,000 m new JObs.

the consolidation plan which it
adopted."
·
.
"There is also evidence with .
respect to the problems of accessibihty, lighting and cleanliness at
Reedsville's polling place," Taft
said.
According to Taft's leu~r. Clark .
and Wells failed to present suffitienl reason to resciitd the board's
February, 1989 action.
''The board members who vOied
to rescind the prior board action
have not presented any evidence to
indicate th~ the two new .,.ecincts
are excesSively large com!NRd to
others in lhe county; lhll ihe driv·
Continued OD pli• 3

_...,

Although Bush did not name a "we'll be tallcing to them about a
particular nation, it was Clear that lot or lhings."
the major target of his remarks was
In his airpon speech, lhe presiJapan, lhe source of a $43 billion dent said he wanted to "get a firsttrade deficit.
hand glimpse of America's eco·
"There are still too many coun- nomic future, a world in which we
tries where markets are closed to . will conduct more and more busiquality American goods and ser- ness and trade with partners in
vices. There are still too many Asia, Europe and Latin Al!lerica."
countries whose consumers want
"We.seelt no special benefits,
but cannot buy American prod- nci rules stacked in our favor, just
ucts,'' he said.
open markets: trade that is free and
At the same time, the president fair," ·Bush said.
The spoon lias Its m~er's mark, a Impressed
. FACT DISCOVERED· This spoon, a seven
rectangle bearing his name, on tbe back or ~t
did praise the Bank of Japan's
The president is taking wilh him
and one-quarter Inch coined silver piece, made
handle. The spoon, wblch was located at il sale
by
W.A.
Aicher,
a
promlaent
jeweler
in
!DOve on Sunday to lower a key onthetripexecutivesof21 Ameriin Cbillicothe, eaa be seen at the M,lgs Couaty
mt.erest rate by half a ~ercentage ., can.cnmpaniea,...inclwling4Jie._~i,.~ .. ~QJ!!~rOY durin I the late 19tb ceQtury, is tbe !trst
and only evidence that shOws Aicher was a sifMuseum.
pomt.
. Three U.S. automakers. He said
versmitb as well as a jeweler and watcHmaker.
A few moments later, the pres!- lhese officials ••are ready 10 work
dent told reporters aboard A!r hard in these markets 10 blaze a
Force One th~t the ~e.ntral.bank s trail other American countries,
move to cut us offtc1al dtscount large and small, can follow."
rate from 5 J!Crcent to 4.5 percent
"My message in each country 1
was encouragmg.
. .
visit will be this: free trade is a
Some Jap~nese offtctals have two-way street," Bush said.
usual sort of jeweler's stock , House. Aicher died in the living
called for easter c~t as a way to
Bush was making the trip 10
By JULIE E. DILLON
including
"Fancy Articles or every quaners·of that establishment on
mcrease domesttc demand for Australia, Singapore, Korea and
Sentinel News Staff
1mports.
.
.
Japan amid growmg resentment in
A coined silver spoon made by description." Throughout his long Jan. 3, 1903. He is buried in Sacred
Bush, asked tf he believes that Japan_ which he will visitlast- Wenceslaus A. Aicher, a watch- and successful career, Aicher made Heart Cemetery. This building Can
the Ja)J3l1ese wo~ld tak~ other mea: 10 what Japanese officials see as an maker and jeweler who settled in lavish use or newspaper advertising now be identified as it is the only
swes m
to h1s
said. increasingly strident sales pitch for Pomeroy during March 1858, has and adhered "unflmchingly ," so he building on Main Street in
been placed in the archives of lhe claimed, ·~o my old maxim or Fair Pomeroy with the inscriptiori"Jew'•
u.s. goods.
Dealing." The language of his eler" on the top ornamentation or
Japan's Deputy Foreign Minis- Meigs .County Pioneer and Histori- advertisements
suggests lhat all or lhe facade.
ter Koji Watanabe on Sunday cal Society at.the·Meigs County his goods were American
and manThe coined silver fiddle-back
denied last week's reports that his Museum. The spoon was located at ufactured elsewhere or were
Eurospoon
which has been donated to
government was considering plans a sale in Chillicothe.
pean
imports,
his
label
or
watchthe
museum
is or significance as it
The book, Orna1e and Simple
to limit exports of autos and auto
maker
notwithstanding.
is
the
first
and
only evidence that
Forms: Pomeroy Furniture and
parts.
Aicher's
establishment
was
Aicher
was
a
silversmith
as well as
"! categorically deny that is Fashion, 1840-1880, by Catherine
a
jeweler
and
watchmaker.
The
located
between
the
former
Gibson
under consideration," Watanabe McQuaid Steiner and Schuyler
spoon
also
bears
lhe
maker's
marie
House
on
Front
Street
and
what
said on NBC-TV's "Meet the Eaton Cone, states Aicher orfered became known as the Remington an impressed rectangle on the back
for sale at his establishment the
Press.''
or the handle with Aicher's name.

Coined silver spoon made by Pomeroy
watchmaker placed in Meigs County Museum

Texas River climbs toward record levels
in Ri chmond. Up to ISO ~eople
01ight have to evacuate, he srud. .
"Luckily, there's no more ram
expected, That will help us a whole
lot," he said.
About 20 miles downstream
from Richmond, ncar Rosharon,
the river late Sunday stood at 50.8
feet, breaking the record or 50}
feet set in 1968. The crest wasn t

RICHMOND, Texas (AP) Residents carried feed to their cattle in row boats, pulled up carpets
and put furniture up on sawhorses
as the muddy, rain-swollen Brazos
River climbed toward its highest
levels in two decades today.

. Licenses expire Tuesday

OVER 750 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU- CHECK YOUR LOCAL
DIRECTORY OR YELLOW PAGES FOR THE STORE NEAREST YOU/

A Mulllmodla Inc. New~p~~per

Latest effort to restore voting precinCt rejected

--Local briefs-__,..,

Welt~

cto,r tonlt!ht. Low .... 30.

Tuesday, partly sunny. High
near40

1 Section, 1o Pag• 25 a.to

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, MQnday, -December 30, 1991

LEAVING FOR AUSTRALIA- President Bush left ror Australia
and Asia today on a 12-day bard-sell mission for American goods.
Although Initially planned as a go¢wUI tour, the mission was recast
as a trade mission whe1 the U.S. economic recovery raltered and
Bush's approval ratlags plunged. (AP LaserPboto)

'134 PER DENTURE!

•J

Vol. 42, No. 1.66
Copyrighted 1991

GUARDS

SMALLADDmordz.. CHARCE FOR SAME DAY SERVICE

'I

P~ge4

Snaps on door
lldQe for door
protection.
Pkg. or 2.1921.

Our Regular SerW:e Is Aoollable At AU Olfif:es.
SAD DAY IIRVICII OI'IIW.IDS AND UPAIRII

11311

9·S

Super Lotto:
. 5-23-27-28-31-44
Klcker:972073

1712A.

CALL TOLL FREE 1~800-9~6-0025
For AD Appollltmeat or Information.

WIUialll V. BeU. D.D.S., Inc.

Pick 3:683
Pick 4:8545
. Cards:
S-H; A-C; 5-D;

PLUG
GAP
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Custom Fitted Oenturee In One Day At Our Teays Valley om~
By Our Professionals And ~ed StaiT.
Made In Our Dental Laboratory By O!llllllled Technicians.

Vlrpnia Dental Service

Southern ·
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SMIIIC

YOUR DENTURES IN ONE DAY

DENTURES START AT

Ohio Lottery

Middlepon businesses are reminded that all licenses for coinoperated amusement machines expire on Tuesday, Dec. 31, and
must be renewed.
The license 'fees are $50 for each jukebox, $50 each for lhe ftrst
. three coin-operated machines and $25 each for each machine after
the flfSt three.
Licenses may be purchased at the mayor's office daily between 8
a.m. and.4 p.m.
·
Continued on page 3

The river was expected to crest
in Richmond today at about 50 feet,
or 2 feet above flood level, sending
more mwky water gushing into lhe
town. and pastwes about 20 miles
southwest of Houston.
Flooding caused by days of
heavy rain lhat began last week has
killed at least 15 people across
Texas, swamped farmland,
drowned livestock and caused millions or dollars in damage.
In Simonton, where the river
crested Sunday morning, about 200
homes were washed by water some up to 2 feet The river is normally a half-mile away. Evacuees
stayed with relatives and friends
rather than go to county shelters.
Some residents along the Brazos
carried feed in row boats and
motorboats to cattle stranded on
hills.

expected there until late today.
In rural southern Fort Bend
County, Melissa and Kirt Ha s·
sclmcicr and four of their friends
traveled by boat to check on their
house. The couple's 10 acres had
become a knee-deep swamp, and
the water was inches from their
house.
Flooding continued in Liberty

County east or Houston, affecting
about 3,500 people living near the
Trinity River.
Officials in Wharton, about I00
miles to the west, said the nowreceding Colorado River caused an
estimated $4 million damage to the
city and $4 million to the county.
About 30 homes and two businesses were heavily damaged.

t

Some residents pulled·up thd
carpets as .the water advance6. '
Williams and his wife, Cathy, had
stacked llleir belongings on tables
and sawhotses before !her, fled to a
convenience store, but sull expect·
ed up to $30,000 in damage.
Like many in the area, they have
no flood insurance.
Mel Speed, Fort Bend County
emergency coordinator, said the
river stood at 48.8 feet late Sunday

FLOODED NATIVITY - A aativily scene Is
submerged In the nood water or tbe rain-swollen

Brazos River oa a fum a ear Missouri City,
Texas, Sunday moraing. (AP LuerPhoto)

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